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Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Plankton, Algae, and Plants

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Plankton, Algae, and Plants. Plankton . Plankton: the mass of mostly microscopic organisms that float or drift freely in the waters of aquatic (freshwater and marine) environments. (Algae, phytoplankton, zooplankton, jellyfish). The basis of all life in the ocean. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Page 2: Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Plankton Plankton: the mass of mostly microscopic organisms that float or drift

freely in the waters of aquatic (freshwater and marine) environments. (Algae, phytoplankton, zooplankton, jellyfish).

The basis of all life in the ocean.

Make oxygen for us to breath.

Page 3: Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Collecting and Studying Plankton Plankton Nets: Conical nets made of nylon

threads woven in a fine interlocking pattern. Hauled behind a ship or set to a certain depth and then reeled in.

Analyze plankton by counting how many there are, the types, and an estimate of the sample volume of water. Plankton per unit volume of water.

Why Study Plankton? Plankton can tell us about the amount of

dissolved oxygen, carbon dioxide, pH, temperature, and light intensity of the ocean at the time and place of sampling.

Page 4: Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Phytoplankton: The Autotrophs Generate sugar (glucose) by photosynthesis.

Make oxygen for us to breathe. 75% of Earth’s oxygen comes from phytoplankton in the ocean.

Live in Photic zone

Critical to marine life and life on Earth Primary producers and bottom of food web Generate oxygen

Page 5: Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Types of Phytoplankton Diatoms: Dominant and most productive.

Appeared in Cretaceous about 100 million years ago. Contributed to Earth’s current atmospheric oxygen. More than 5,600 known species! Made of Silica

Dinoflagellates: Some live in corals. Others are free drifters. Have flagella to propel them forward and rotate around. Can move vertically but not side to side. Reproduce by division Some are bioluminescent: Chemical reaction transformed into light (they glow!) Numerous bioluminescent dinoflagellates cause “red tides” or harmful algal blooms. Usually occurs in spring: Can reach 29 million organisms per gallon!

Page 6: Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Red Tide

Page 7: Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Types of Phytoplankton Coccolithophores and Silicoflagellates:

Coccolithophores: Covered in disks of calcium carbonate (calcite). Live near surface in brightly lit areas. In Mediterranean, they make the water look milky because they are so abundant Make up the famous White Cliffs of Dover in England (chalk) Silicoflagellates: made of silica (quartz) One or two flagella to move Little is known about them

Picoplankton: Extremely small Contribute a lot of oxygen

Page 8: Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Upwelling Upwelling: the movement of deep,

cold, and nutrient-rich water to the surface.

Organisms sink when they die. But these dead organisms are nutrient rich. They must be brought to the surface for other organisms to have food.

Sunlight is also a key factor.

Page 9: Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Zooplankton: The Heterotrophs Planktonic organisms that eat the primary producers

Most numerous primary consumers in the ocean

Eat diatoms, dinoflagellates, and other phytoplankton

Page 10: Plankton, Algae, and Plants

Types of Zooplankton Copepods: Tiny shrimp-like animals related to crabs, lobsters, and shrimp which are all

crustaceans. Make up 70% of zooplankton in the ocean

Jellyfish: Considered macroplankton because they are larger than 1 centimeter across.

Krill: Considered the keystone to the Arctic ecosystem. A shrimp-like crustacean that is eaten by seabirds, squids, fishes, and whales. Travel in schools

Foraminifera (forams): Calcium Carbonate (calcite shells) Related to amoebas