Marine Ecosystems
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Transcript Marine Ecosystems
Ecology and Ecosystems
Marine ecology studies the relationships and
interactions of the abiotic and biotic aspects of the
environment
Abiotic factors are the non-living parts and will include rocks,
sand, water, temperature,salinity, light, wind, etc
Biotic factors are the living parts and will include plants,
animals, fish, bacteria, etc
4 Branches of marine ecology include:
Biological oceanography
Chemical oceanography
Geological oceanography
Physical oceanography
Ecology Terminology
1. Ecosystem- a community of organisms and their abiotic
environment.
2. Community- a collection of different organisms living
and interacting in an ecosystem
3. Population- a group of the same species living and
interacting within a community
4. Habitat- includes the area and conditions in which you
find an organism
5. Microhabitat- same as a habitat but on a very small
scale. Example: tiny organisms living between the grains
of sand
6. Niche- an organisms role in its habitat
Energy Flow
Photosynthesizers and chemosynthesizers bring energy from
the sun and chemicals into the food web
This energy transfers up through the food web but only
10% of it is available to pass on to the next trophic level
This limits the number of organisms at each trophic
level
Numbers of organisms drastically decline as you go from
primary producers to high level predators
There are far more primary producers such as
plankton and grasses and very few top predators such
as sharks
High primary production creates the potential for
more organisms at high trophic levels
Energy Flow
If pollution causes a substantial decline in an ecosystem’s
primary consumers it will disrupt energy flow to all the other
trophic levels
It will cause a decline in population numbers at each trophic
level
We see this happening with a decline in commercial fishing
production
In past years New Jersey saw a decline in many species of
organisms due to pollution