Transcript Ocean Zones
Chapter 5
Exploring the Ocean
Light Up the Ocean Floor
People have studied the ocean since ancient times,
because the ocean provides food and serves as a
route for trade and travel. Modern scientists have
studied the characteristics of the ocean’s waters and
the ocean floor.
Exploring the Ocean Floor
sonar (SOund NAvigation and clip major advance in
floor mapping which uses sound waves to calculate
the distance to an object.
Features of the Ocean text pgs. 150-151
ocean floor tour
Google Earth Sea Tour
If you could travel along the ocean floor, you would see:
the continental shelf
gently sloping, shallow area of the ocean floor that extends outward from the edge
of a continent
the continental slope
the steep edge of a continental shelf
the abyssal plain
the smooth, nearly flat region of
the ocean floor
the mid-ocean ridge
a continuous range of mountains
winds around Earth
Trench
a steep sided canyon in the ocean
floor
Seamount – a mountain on the ocean
floor, completely under water clip
diagram
that
Earth’s Layers
The Earth consists of the following layers:
the core – Earth’s center
the mantle – the thick molten layer between the core
and the crust
the crust – the thin,
rocky, outer layer of
Earth
Earth’s Plates
Mid-Ocean Ridge
plates – the pieces of Earth’s crust, along with parts
of the upper mantle
Plate movements have shaped many of the most
dramatic features of Earth, both on land and under
the ocean.
seafloor spreading – a process by which new rock
is added to the ocean floor along the boundary
between diverging plates Bill Nye's clip
Seafloor spreading is slowly causing Earth’s plates
to move together.
Seafloor Spreading
End of Part One
Skills Lab pg. 155 “Mapping the Shape of the Ocean
Floor”
http://www.discovery.com/tv-shows/sharkweek/videos/alien-sharks-goblin-shark/
Ocean Zones
Ocean zones include:
the intertidal zone
the highest high-tide line
on land
the neritic zone
Extends from the low-tide line out to the edge of the
continental shelf
the open-ocean zone
the ocean beyond the edge of the continental shelf
Ocean Zones
(Label diagram)
Life in the Ocean
Scientists classify marine organisms according to
where they live and how they move.
Plankton – tiny algae and animals that float
in the water and are carried by waves and
currents
Nekton – free-swimming animals that can
move throughout the water column
Benthos – organisms that
inhabit the ocean floor
Ocean Food
Webs
Food web All of the
feeding relationships
that exist in a habitat.
Note the importance of
Phytoplankton (algae)
and zooplankton
(microscopic animals) at
Its base.
Science Nation - Surprising Study
Intertidal Zone
Organisms that live in the shallow, warm waters of the
rocky intertidal zone must be able to tolerate the
constant pounding of the waves and changes in
both salinity and temperature. They must also
withstand periods of being underwater (wet) and
periods of being exposed to the air. (dry) clip
Summarizer for Intertidal Zone
Constant pounding of waves
Changes in salinity and temperature
Wet and dry
Very shallow water and warm
Organisms found: barnacles, hermit crabs
Neritic Zone
The somewhat shallow, warm water over the continental shelf
receives sunlight and a steady supply of nutrients washed from
the land into the ocean. The light and nutrients enable large plantlike algae (clip) grow. A large variety of plants and animals are found
here. This zone houses the most life overall of all the zones.
Summarizer for Neritic Zone
Kelp forest and coral reef here
Variety of plants and animal life
Rich in nutrients
Somewhat shallow and warm
Most life overall (we think)
Organisms found: sea anemone, kelp, sea otter
Coral Reef
Why should you care?(clip)
A coral reef is another type of diverse habitat found
in the neritic zone.
Coral reefs can form only in shallow, tropical ocean
waters.
Life in a Kelp Forest
Kelp forests grow in somewhat
cold neritic waters where the
ocean has a rocky floor.
Conditions in the
Open Ocean Habitat
The open ocean differs from the neritic zone in two
important ways. First, only a small part of the open
ocean receives sunlight. Second, the water has
fewer nutrients.
The three open ocean zones:
The Surface Zone (Sunlight)
2. The Transition Zone (Twilight)
3. The Deep Zone(Midnight)
1.
bioluminescence – the production of light by living things
Summarizer for Open-Ocean
Surface Zone
AKA: Sunlight Zone
0-600 feet below surface
Smallest zone (but most life (90%) in open ocean)
Most light absorbed by 300 ft.
Organisms found: dolphins, sharks, algae
Summarizer for Open-Ocean
Transition Zone
AKA: Twilight Zone
600- 3000 feet below surface
Very little life
Cold temperatures and more pressure
Organisms found: flashlight fish, lantern fish, no
algae
Hydrothermal Vents(clip)
Hydrothermal vents are places where ocean water
sinks through cracks in the ocean floor and is heated
by the underlying magma. The heated water then
rises again through the cracks. Water is filled with
minerals.
What kind of creature could live
in such an environment?
Tardegrade
We are the aliens
Summarizer for Open-Ocean
Deep Zone
AKA: Midnight Zone
3000- 11,000 feet below surface
NO light (except bioluminescence)
Very, very cold temperatures and more pressure
Organisms found: bacteria, tube worms, giant squid
Summarizer
Resources From the Ocean
People depend heavily on fishes and other ocean
organisms for food. Ocean organisms also provide
materials that are used in products such as
detergents and paints.
Aquaculture – the farming of
saltwater and freshwater
organisms
Overfishing our oceans
The problem (clip)
Nonliving Resources
Some nonliving ocean resources include:
Water
Fuels (oil)
Minerals
Nodules – black lumps
formed when metals
concentrate around pieces
of shell
Ocean Pollution (clip)
Although some ocean pollution is the result of
natural occurrences, most pollution is related to
human activities.
It is important for humans to protect Earth’s oceans.
You can make a difference
Stop ocean pollution (clip)