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Figure 10.22 Subtidal Zone • The part of the continental shelf that is always covered by water – from the low tide mark to the shelf break (150m or 490 ft) Subtidal Zone • Temperature varies from place to place due to its shallowness • Bottom still affected by waves, tides and currents • Very productive areas – nutrients & light Subtidal Zone • Soft Bottom Communites – Seagrass Beds • Hard Bottom Communites – Kelp Forests Seagrass Beds • Develop in sheltered shallow water • Most species prefer warm waters – Turtle Grass • Some are found in colder areas – Eelgrass (Zostera marina) our local species Figure 13.17 Ecological Targets Hard Clams Seagrass Meadows Seagrass Beds • Slow down currents • Increase the depositing of sediments • Have roots - can absorb nutrients from the sediment Seagrass Beds • Important nursery for juvenile animals – Bay scallop on Long Island Figure 13.16 Generalized food web in a seagrass community Hard-Bottom Subtidal Communities • Less common than soft-bottom • Submerged extension of rocky intertidal, hard parts of organisms (oyster shells, calcareous algae) • Sometimes called “reefs” – not coral Kelp • Kelp = large brown seaweed • Large holdfast to hold onto the rocky bottom • Long stipes • Fronds… 20-30m (65-100ft) • Go through two stages in their life cycle Laminaria Laminaria Alaria (edible) Geographic Kelp Distribution Kelp Communities • Arranged in distinct layers • Giant kelp forms in deeper waters – reduced wave action – Forms a canopy Figure 13.23 Kelp: Baja, CA Figure 13.25 Kelp Communities • Many organisms • Sea Urchins = most important grazers or herbivores Fig. nft Sea Urchins • What leads to population explosions? – Absence of their predators – Overfishing, less seals & sea lions, killer whales eat sea otters, more urchins Figure 13.26