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Mesopelagic Zone Or.... • Below the epipelagic zone and above the bathypelagic zone. • Depth: Extends from surface 200 meters (656 feet) to 1,000 meters (3,286 feet.) Temperature • Temperature: 5-4 degrees Celsius, 41-39 degrees Fahrenheit Light • Light: called "the twilight zone" due to the scarce amounts of light. Facts Continued • Oxygen: Is in between the oxygen-rich zone, and the less oxygen deep waters. • Pressure: up to 1470 pounds per square inch and increases with depth.(10,100,000 Pa) • Organisms survive by spending their days in this zone (sunlight), then rise to the surface at night. Currents • Currents – Water residence time in the mesopelagic zone is approximately 100 years or roughly one ninth that of the bathypelagic zone. • Water Movement is known to be hydrologically slow moving in this zone. Abiotic Factors Abiotic Factors: Sun (light) water (salt) rocks sand oxygen predation system clouds Biotic Factors Vertebrates • Vertebrates: gills are more efficient, minimize movement, swordfish, squid, wolffish, and some species of cuttlefish, many are bioluminescent. Many will rise to the epipelagic zone at night to feed. Invertebrates In the Mesopelagic zone, we see invertebrates like krill, arrow worms, shrimp, and copepods. Animal Facts • Predator avoidance Strategies --Countershading, transparency -Reduction of silhouette: bioluminescense. • With surface light in the background, animals can create a detectable shadow; ventral photophores help animals blend with the background • Some fish are also found in the bathypelagic zone. • Angel shark, brittle star, ceolocanth, clams, crabs, cuttlefish, eels, gray whales, greenland shark Primary Producers Zooplankton: krill, copepods, ostracods, arrow worms, and some types of squid. Mollusks: Squids and cuttlefish.