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Photo-oxidize = broken down by the sun Unit 2 Exam Review Review: • Oceanography: – the study chemistry, geography, and geology of the oceans & human’s interactions with the oceans. • Earliest Recorded Sea Voyage: – The earliest recorded sea voyage was by the Egyptians around 3200 B.C. • Phoenicians: – Established early trade routes & never left the sight of land • Polynesians: – Earliest known regular, long-distance, open-ocean seafaring Review: • Greeks: – First to use math to develop sophisticated maps for seafaring • Pytheas: – First known to be able to predict Atlantic tides based on phases of the moon • Eratothenes: – Used math to accurately determine the circumference of the Earth to be approximately 40,000 km Review: • Leif Eriksson: – A Viking credited as the first to discover North America (Newfoundland, Canada) Review: • Christopher Columbus: – Discovered the Bahamas while sailing in search of India; widely credited for discovering America • Ferdinand Magellan: – First to circumnavigate the globe • Shift in Reasons for Ocean Voyages (18th Century): – Prior to the 18th century seafaring was based in war, conquest, and trade. After the 18th century many successful nations began exploring for the sake of knowledge & map making Review: • Ben Franklin & the Gulf Stream: – Discovered that traveling along certain routes was much faster & created/distributed maps to shipping companies. • Charles Darwin: – Made important discoveries concerning evolution & geographical isolation on his journeys to the Galapagos on the HMS Beagle. • The Rosses & Edward Forbes: – Disagreed on the amount of life spread throughout the ocean. Review: • Polar Oceanography & the Fram: – In a race to the North Pole the Fram became stuck in ice and drifted for 3 years. This drift established that there was no continent in the Arctic. • Plate Tectonics: – A scientific theory concerning continental drift first proposed by Alfred Wegener in 1915 • Deep Sea Submersibles: – Both manned and unmanned vessels used for exploration of the ocean, spying, and war. – Alvin is the most famous deep-sea exploration vessel Review: • Jacques Cousteau: – The individual partially responsible for the popularization of recreational SCUBA diving & the first to popularize the idea of underwater living chambers in the 1950s Review: • Kingdom vs. Genus species - Kingdom most broad category (Animal, Plant, etc) - Genus species Scientific name, most specific, genus is always first & capitalized • Planktonic – Free-floating organisms such as plankton, jellyfish, and many aquatic larvae • Nektonic – Free swimming organism such as a shark, pilot fish, octopus, or dolphin Review: • Benthic - Any organism that lives exclusively on the bottom of the ocean such as a star fish, anemone, sand dollar, etc • Phytoplankton vs. Zooplankton • • Phytoplankton (drifting plants and algae) Zooplankton (drifting animals) Review: • Adaptations for viscosity of water: – Many small organisms lack skeletons/support systems – Instead, they rely on buoyancy and friction to maintain their position within the water column – Cold water has higher viscosity than warm water, so is more difficult to swim through – Warm water has lower viscosity, so organisms tend to sink within the water column Review: • Adaptations for viscosity of water: – Appendages: • Many warm-water organisms have ornate appendages to say afloat • Many cold-water organisms are streamlined to swim more easily – Surface area: • Small size increases surface area to volume ratio • Tiny droplet of low density oil increases buoyancy Review: • Adaptations for variations in temperature - Eurythermal – coastal organisms (in general); can withstand a wide range in temperatures - Stenothermal – open ocean/deep sea; can only survive in a narrow range of temperatures Review: • Adaptations for variations in salinity - Euryhaline– coastal organisms (in general); can withstand a wide range in salinities - Stenohaline – open ocean/deep sea; can only survive in a narrow range of salinities Review: • Hypertonic - A higher concentration within a membrane than on the outside • Hypotonic – A lower concentration within a membrane than on the outside • Add: Review: Review: • Adaptations for water’s transparency: - Transparency: - An organism is/appears to be see-through - Camouflage: - An organism blends in with its surroundings - Countershading: - An organism has a light-colored side & a dark-colored side to blend in with different view points - Chromatophores: - Small cells that allow an organism to change colors to communicate, blend in, intimidate Review: Review: Review: Review: Review: • Deep Scattering Layer (DSL) - Organisms within the deep scattering layer undertake a daily migration to hide in deep, darker waters during daytime Review: • Pelagic: - Open water, includes nektonic & planktonic species • Benthic: – Bottom-dwelling species, make sup 98% of all aquatic species • Epipelagic: – The top layer of open ocean, lots of sunlight • Mesopelagic: – The twilight region that has a small amount of light Review: • Bathypelagic: - Below 1000 meters - No sunlight - Low temperature • Abyssopelagic: – The bottom region of the ocean – No sunlight – Extremely low temperatures – Extremely high pressure • Hadal: – Trenches at the bottom of the ocean, deepest regions Review: Review: • Euphotic: - “true” “light” - Any region of the water that has a consistent amount of sunlight • Disphotic: – “removed” “light” – A small amount of sunlight makes it to this depth • Aphotic: – “no” “light” – Any region of the water that is completely without sunlight Review: • Coastal Waters: – Relatively shallow areas that adjoin continents – Heavily used for commerce, recreation, fisheries, and waste disposal – Experience dramatic changes in salinity and temperature Review: Review: • Thermocline: – A temperature gradient within the water column – Found most often in mid-latitude waters • Estuaries: – A body of water that is partially enclosed by land – Examples: Bays, Gulfs, Lagoons • Barrier Islands: (replace lagoon) – Landforms that block inland areas from extreme storms/tides Review: • Coastal Wetlands: – Brackish water conditions – Salt marshes (mid-latitudes) – Mangrove swamps (low latitudes) – Coastal wetlands are highly productive areas that serve as fish nurseries for many important species – Effectively filter polluted runoff from land Review: • Pollution of Coastal Wetlands: – are viewed as worthless land, so are often replaced with developments (roads, housing, shopping, etc.) – Heavily used – Close to sources of pollution – Shallow-water bodies – Not as well circulated as the open ocean Review: • Petroleum Pollution: – Oil spills can be caused by: • Tanker accidents • Intentional dumping • Drilling/pumping operations – Petroleum is biodegradable – Many pollution experts consider oil to be among the least damaging ocean pollutants – Photo-oxidation & Dispersal Agents Review: • Sewage sludge: – Unfiltered human waste or the left over, unusable byproduct after water has been through a water treatment plant – It was often dumped straight into bodies of water until the laws of 1998 were past – Dumping is still permitted with a permit Review: • Bioaccumulation: – The build-up of toxins within an ecosystem – Examples: DDT, PCBS, heavy metals Review: Review: Review: • Minamata Disease: – Caused by dumping of waste that had a high concentration of mercury (Hg) into local bodies of water – Caused severe birth defects & neurological damage Review: • Non-point-source Pollution: – Pollution that comes from an area, not simply one source – Poisonous runoff – Includes fertilizers, road oil, trash, etc Review: • Oceanic Garbage patches: – The largest can be found in the middle of the Pacific Ocean – Currents/gyres pull trash from Eastern Asia and the West of North America – Twice the size of Texas and at least 100 feet Review: • Plastic and the environment: – Currently the only substance that is illegal to dump at any distance from land – It is considered very dangerous because: • • • • Does not biodegrade Floats Has high strength Is ingested by and entangles marine animals