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Published byProsper Hill Modified over 9 years ago
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Animals of the Benthic Environment
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I. Rocky Shores A. Suproalittoral zone – (spray zone) – must avoid drying out, many have shells. a. Rock lice or sea roaches – scavengers. ↑ to 3 cm. Feed at night on organic debris, hide during the day. Rocky Shore Zones WS’s
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b. Limpets – flat conical shell and a muscular foot that clings to rock. Feed on marine algae c. Periwinkles – conical shell feed on marine algae
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B. High Tide Zone – protective cover to prevent from drying out 1. Periwinkles – move between here and spray zone
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2. Buckshot barnacles – protective covering but filter feed so need to under water for a period of time. Larval form is planktonic. 3. Fucus – algae “rock Weed” – cooler latitude thick cell walls to ↓ water loss during low tide. First to colonize rocky shores. 4. Pelvetia – “Rock Weed” – warmer latitude
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C. Middle Tide Zone – salt water continuously bathes this area 1. Acorn & gooseneck barnacles – attach to rocks with long muscular necks.
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Gooseneck barnacles Acorn Barnacles
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2. Mussels – attach to bare rock, algae or barnacles 3. Carnivorous Snails and Sea Stars – feed upon the mussels
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3. Anemones – flat foot disc attaches to rock surface 4. Hermit Crabs – inhabit tide pools 5. Sea Urchins – feed on algae
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D. Low Tide Zone – almost always submerged 1. algae – abundant, red, green and brown – provides a canopy which animal life can hide under
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2. Shore Crabs – various species, scavengers, help keep shore clean II. Sediment Covered Shore A. Sediment – beaches, salt marshes and mud flats
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Beaches Marshes Mudflats
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B. Sandy Beaches 1. bivalve mollusks – 2 hinged shells, single foot digs into sediment and pulls mollusk down, siphon extends vertically through sediment for feeding 2. Annelid worms – segmented worms a. Lugworms – u-shaped burrows, walls strengthened with mucus. Deposit feeders, eat sand, digests food, sand is passes out
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Mollusk Diversity WS
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3. Crustaceans – crabs, lobster, shrimp and barnacles. Segmented bodies, hard exoskeleton and paired joints a. Beach hoppers – feeds on kelp cast up by storm waves or ↑ tides. Active at night. b. Sand crabs – bury bodies in sand, filter food particles from water.
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4. Echinoderm a. Sand Stars – move through sediments b. Heart urchins – flattened and elongated, live buried in sand near low-tide line. Eat sand and scrape off organic coating. 5. Meiofauna – live in the spaces between sediment particles
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C. Mud Flats 1. Eelgrass, Turtle grass – widely distributed in low-tide zone 2. bivalve mollusks
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C. Shallow Offshore Ocean Floor – extends from spring low tide shore line to seaward edge of continental shelf. Mainly sediment covered by rocky exposures may occur locally near shore
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1. Rocky Bottoms (sublittoral) a. Micro algae b. Bladder Kelp – highly productive. NA Pacific coast attaches to rocks as deep as 30m. Only large storm waves can break them free. c. Bull kelp – highly productive d. Red and Brown algae
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e. Sea Hare – feed on kelp f. Sea Urchins – feed on kelp g. Lobsters - crustaceans 1). Spiny - scavengers 2). True – American Lobster – scavengers, feed on live mollusks, crustaceans and other lobsters.
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h. Oysters – bivalve mollusks found in estuaries. Need steady clean flow of plankton filled water. 1). Food for: sea stars, crabs, fish, and snails that bore through shell and rasp away soft tissue.
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