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Deep-sea Ecosystems The Mesopelagic Zone (~200-1000 m): from photosynthetic- compensation depth to limit of down-welling sunlight (below = aphotic zone) Photosynthetic-compensation Depth: depth where sunlight becomes too low for phytoplankton to maintain positive metabolism (above = euphotic zone) Deep-scattering Layer: layer of zooplankton and small fishes that rises at night; shows a scattering effect on SONAR traces Major Selection Pressures in the Deep Sea Light (low or none): large and specialized eyes common, bioluminescence common (light emitted without heat, luciferin and luciferase; multiple functions) Temperature (cold) and Density (high): slow metabolisms; little muscle necessary to maintain position Pressure (high): fishes often lack swim bladder Food Availability (low): fishes with large mouths and teeth Figure 14-31 Deep-sea Ecosystems Deep-sea Communities: benthic communities more diverse than once believed (bias regarding sampling via nets and bottom grabs vs. observations via submersibles & ROVs) Hydrothermal-vent Communities: diverse communities in aphotic zone (pogonophoran worms, crustaceans, bivalves, fishes) supported by chemosynthetic bacteria (use hydrogen sulfide; symbiotic relationships support animals); discovered in 1970s Whale Falls: most dead whales sink to seafloor; animal communities similar to those at vents; researchers found 5,098 animals (178 species) on one square yard of bone Gigantism: giant squids, sleeper sharks, giant isopod; a result of slow metabolisms, long life spans? Living Fossils: coelacanth, Nautilus, Neopilina (snail); related to stable conditions (few extinctions?) Figures 11-12 and 14-34 Figures 14-33 and 11-15 Figure 14-32 Plate Tectonics Continental Drift and Pangaea (Wegener, 1915); lacked explanation of how continents could move Theory of Plate Tectonics (Hess, 1960s) based on observations via SONAR and magnetometers (World War II technologies) Major plates of Earth’s crust float on semi-molten upper mantle Divergence (spreading centers at mid-ocean ridges): new oceanic crust produced (basalt); Mid-Atlantic Ridge best studied Convergence (subduction zones): old crust pushed down at fault; associated with deep-sea trenches, high seismic and volcanic activities (Ring of Fire around Pacific basin) Sliding Faults: lateral movement of plates (ex. San Andreas Fault) Hot Spots: localized volcanic activity (away from faults); create island chains as plates move (ex. Hawaiian islands) Evidence: areas of seismic and volcanic activity; shapes of continents and correspondence of fossils, strata, and extant species; magnetic stripes and age gradients of seafloor Figures 11-4 and 11-5 Figure 11-6 Figures 11-1 and 11-2 Figure 11-10 Figures 11-18 and 11-19 Figures 11-21 and 11-22 Figures 11-8 and 11-9 Figure 11-11 Figure 11-13 Figure 11-14 Figure 11-17 Figure 11-24