Transcript File
Oceanic Zones Notes
Overview
More than 250,000 identified marine species
Most live in sunlit surface seawater
Species success depends on ability to:
Find food
Avoid predation
Reproduce
Cope with physical barriers to movement
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Plankton and Zooplankton
Nekton
Independent
swimmers; can
migrate
Most adult fish
and squid
Marine mammals
Marine reptiles
Benthos
Most abundant in shallower water.
Three types:
Epifauna live on or near the bottom of the sea floor.
Oysters, sponges, sea squirts, sea stars, barnacles
Infauna live buried in sediments.
Worms, clams
Nektobenthos swim or crawl through water above seafloor.
Cephlapods, turtles & other reptiles, marine mammals
Marine Division by Light
Photic Zone (photo- means light):
the sunlit layer of the ocean’s surface that extends to a depth of
600 meters (2000 feet)
a)
a)
Euphotic Zone- upper part of photic zone,
lots of light for plant production to support photosynthesis
Disphotic Zone- lower part of photic zone,
animals can see but there is insufficient light for photosynthesis
Aphotic Zone (a- means without):
the deepest and largest region
of the open ocean that extends
to the ocean bottom
Photic Zone
More than 90% of all marine life lives in the photic zone
of the ocean
Photic Zone
Euphotic Zone
Euphotic Zone: Top layer of the ocean
Photic Zone
Euphotic Zone
Disphotic Zone
Disphotic Zone: Only a small amount of light penetrates the water. (Plants do
not grow here due to the insufficient amount of light.)
Photic Zone
Euphotic Zone
Disphotic Zone
Aphotic Zone: Entirely dark; no light
Marine Division by Location
Pelagic Zone - open water, divided into Neritic
Zone (near shore over continental shelf) and
Oceanic Zone (deep water beyond the continental
shelf)
Benthic Zone -division of ocean bottom
pelagic zone
Divided into two zones:
benthic zone
Pelagic Environments
Epipelagic-
photic
zone/sunlight zone
Mesopelagic-
disphotic
zone/twilight zone
Bathypelagic-
aphotic
zone/midnight zone
Abyssopelagic-
abyssal zone/abyss
Hadalpelagic-
deep trench/hadal
Benthic Environments
Supralittoral
Subneritic
Littoral
Sublittoral
Inner
Outer
Suboceanic
Bathyal
Abyssal
Hadal
Supralittoral Zone- the splash zone,
right above the high intertidal zone
Subneritic:
Littoral Zone- where the coast is
covered and uncovered by tidal action
Sublittoral Zone- past the
littoral, divided into:
Inner Sublittoral (ocean
bottom near the shore)
Outer Sublittoral (ocean
bottom out to the edge of the
continental shelf)
Suboceanic:
Bathyal Zone- bottom that covers the areas on
the continental slopes down to great depths
Abyssal Zone- the dark, lower regions which
includes the deepest sea floor but not the trenches
Hadal Zone- deepest of all the sea floor, trench
walls and bottom of trenches