Transcript Plankton
Plankton
http://www.dnr.sc.gov/marine/sertc/gallery.htm
http://www.coralreeffish.com/larvae.htm
Ocean Zones
Horizontal divisions:
Coastal (neritic) = on/over shelf (shallow)
Oceanic = beyond continental shelf (deep)
Vertical
divisions:
Pelagic = open
water
Benthic =
ocean bottom
Ocean Zones
Plankton or Nekton?
How fast can you swim?
Gulf Stream peak
velocity
= 5 knots = 2.5 m/sec
Surface currents more
typically
<0.5 knot = 0.25 m/sec
(=0.56 mph)
http://oceancurrents.rsmas.miami.edu/atlantic/img_mgsva/gulf-stream-YYY.gif
Plankton or Nekton?
Swim faster than 25 cm/sec?
Yes → Nekton:
Dolphin = 170 cm/sec (up to 40 mph!)
Tuna = 75 cm/sec (higher burst speeds)
No → Plankton:
Shrimp = 5 cm/sec
Bacteria = 0.005 cm/sec
Slow, but not necessarily small
Portuguese man-of-war
float = 12 inches wide
tentacles = over 150 ft.
long (ouch!)
http://www.dnr.sc.gov/marine/sertc/gallery.htm
Net Plankton
Phytoplankton
Cyanobacteria
Unicellular microalgae
Diatoms
Dinoflagellates
Coccolithophorids
c2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
http://www.daviddarling.info/images/diatoms.jpg
http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/micropolitan/fresh/protozoa/ceratiumdic2.jpg
Zooplankton
Protozoans (unicellular):
Foraminiferans
Radiolarians
Ciliates
http://www.anu.edu.au/EMU/Images/radiol.jpg
http://server1.fandm.edu/Departments/Biology/People/Shimeta/research/tin2.JPG
Zooplankton
Gelatinous:
Jellyfish (medusa)
Siphonophores
NOAA
http://life.bio.sunysb.edu/marinebio/plankton.html
Zooplankton
Gelatinous:
Comb jellies
(ctenophores)
Zooplankton
Gelatinous:
Salps
Larvaceans
(invertebrate
chordates)
NOAA
Zooplankton
Molluscs:
Pteropods (gastropods),
with and without shell
Zooplankton
Crustaceans:
Copepods
Amphipods
Ostracods
Isopods
Krill, shrimp
http://www.oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/gallery/livingocean/livingocean.html
Zooplankton
“Arrow worms”
(Phylum Chaetognatha)
http://pharyngula.org/images/chaetognathhead.jpg
http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/imgjan00/CHAET2b.JPG
Zooplankton
Mollusc larvae:
Trochophore
Veliger
http://oceanlink.island.net/abaloneproject/growthanddevelopment/growth%20and%20development.htm
http://people.bu.edu/veliger/
Zooplankton
Crustacean larvae:
Crab zoea
Shrimp, barnacle
nauplius
Lobster phyllosoma
NOAA
http://www.dnr.sc.gov/marine/sertc/gallery.htm
http://www.science-in-salamanca.tas.csiro.au/themes/larval/phyllosoma-early.htm
Zooplankton
Other larvae:
Starfish (bipinnaria)
Brittle stars, urchins (pluteus)
NOAA
http://raven.zoology.washington.edu/embryos/
Zooplankton
More larvae:
Polychaete worms (trochophore)
http://www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/imgmar99/poly3.jpg
Zooplankton
Fish larvae
http://www.coralreeffish.com/larvae.htm
Zooplankton
Not all zooplankton are larvae
Those that are larvae, grow up to be
nekton or benthic = meroplankton
Zooplankton
Not all zooplankton are larvae
Those that live whole lives as
plankton = holoplankton
http://www.oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/gallery/livingocean/livingocean.html
That Sinking Feeling
It’s a long way down – average
ocean depth around 4000 m
Phytoplankton – need to stay in the
light surface layer (0-200 m)
Zooplankton – eat the phytoplankton
and/or other zooplankton, so need to
be where the food is
http://www.nerc.ac.uk/images/photos/lp-ocean-sunlight.jpg
That Sinking Feeling
Why am I sinking? Denser than water
Densities (in g/cm3):
Seawater = 1.025
Air = 0.00125
Lipids = 0.9
Proteins = 1.3
Carbohydrates = 1.5
Cellulose = 1.5
Silica shell = 2.6
Calcareous shell = 2.8
That Sinking Feeling
How not to sink:
Float –
Lipids (less dense than water)
Gas vacuoles, sacs, bubbles
http://www-cyanosite.bio.purdue.edu/images/images.html
That Sinking Feeling
How not to sink:
Stay neutral
High water content
(gelatinous)
Reduced or no shell
NOAA
That Sinking Feeling
How not to sink:
Drag (high surface area) –
Small size
Flat shape
Spines, long structures
-------Isopod
That Sinking Feeling
How not to sink:
Upwelling (also good for
nutrients)
Southern Hemisphere –
Ekman transport to the left
That Sinking Feeling
How not to sink:
Actively swim – cilia, flagella,
muscles, appendages
http://www.coralreeffish.com/larvae.htm
Nowhere to Hide
Active predators can’t eat what
they can’t see – so be invisible
Nowhere to Hide
Active predators can’t eat what they
can’t see – so hide where it is dark
Somewhere to Hide
Floating mats of macroalgae and
seagrasses form pelagic communities
- camouflage
Sargassum
NOAA
http://www.bigelow.org/bacteria/teach/images/open_orgs/sargassum.jpg
http://www.naturalsciences.org/education/deepsea/images/sargassum_fish.jpg
Food Webs
Food Webs