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Download 1 Introduction to Marine Ecology jh part 2 2009
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Basic Oceanography • 4 main basins • “Super Ocean” – interconnected • physico-chem differences = different envts = different communities of organisms • Gulfs and seas – enclosed, strong terrestrial influence Bathymetry – Ocean floor features • • • • • • • • Shelf Slope Rise Abyssal plain Mid-ocean ridge Seamount Trench Island arc www.noc.soton.ac.uk/obe/PROJECTS/pap/images/largemap1.jpg Basin cross section stloe.most.go.th/.../LOcanada6/604/9_en.htm Continental margins •Shelf – to 250 m, 0.1° slope, 50-1000 km width, terrigenous or oolotic sediment, sand – silt, highly productive http://www.neseabirds.com/graphics/figure1.jpg • • • • Shelf Slope Rise Submarine canyons • Slope – cont. boundary, 1500-4000 m, 4° slope, • • sand to silt-clay, terrigenous and biogenic Submarine canyons – Glacial or river cut @ lower sea levels, carry shelf sediments via turbidity flows Rise – 4000-6000m, 0.1-1° slope, alluvial fans spread by deep currents Abyssal plain • • • • 3.5-5.5 km, <0.1° slope, “marine snow” biogenic – Calcareous – Siliceous • Terrigenous – Red clay http://www.ga.gov.au/image_cache/GA1705.jpg • Red clay – vol. dust, marine debris, zeolite, iron oxides • Calcareous tropical-temperate, high prod., max. 4500-5000 m • Siliceous - silica available, http://www.noc.soton.ac.uk/gg/BOSCORF/curatorial/pacific.html moderate prod., low calcium carbonate; polar and deep tropical/subtropical • Mid-ocean ridge – – – – Global network Plate boundary Sea floor spreading 2-3 km, emerge Iceland, Azores • Trenches – Subduction – Equilibrium w/spreading – 10 km melt zone – Volcanic arcs – PR- 8400m deep – Mariana – > 11 km Temperature • Extremely important in regulating distribution and abundance of organisms • Latitude, depth • Seawater range -1.9 C 40 C Surface Temperature • Homeotherms (endotherms) and Poilkiotherms (ectotherms) – metabolism increase 2x for each 10° increase • Temperature based biogeographic zones Thermocline • Warm surface water, • • • • tropics, summer Declines w/depth Rapid decline: thermocline Persistent in tropics, summer Deeper: isothermal Depth Thermocline Temperature Density and Ocean Circulation • Temperature, salinity • Themocline and pycnocline separate water masses • Upper or surface and deep – surface T & S vary with latitude, season – deep constant Wind and Ocean Circulation Surface water mass in constant motion via waves and currents • Waves – Energy transport, not molecules – no horizontal transport •Currents transport huge volumes of water across vast distances - result of from major wind bands and Coriolis Force Waves • Movement of energy only • Function of wind speed, fetch duration • Propagate away from origin • Wave length – distance between crests • Period – time for 2 crests to pass • Wave passage generates motion to depth of ~ ½ WL (“wave base”) • Each 1/9 of WL, orbit diameters drop by ½, so by ½ depth motion imperceptible Waves • Bottom slows energy passage • WL declines, height increases • At 1.3x wave height wave breaks, releases energy Wind systems and currents • Temperature differences tropics to poles generate winds • Unequal heating – Sun angle: oblique at poles – Albedo (reflectiveness): high at poles – Both reduce light absorption and heat build up • Atmosphere and ocean move heat from tropics Coreolis effect Coriolis Force • The effect of earth rotation on the direction of the wind. • two reasons, • 1- system of latitude and longitude fixed to a rotating earth, so our frame of reference for a free-moving object above the Earth is constantly changing. • 2 - the amount of turning about a vertical axis varies from a maximum at the poles and minimum at the equator. Deflection: a missile from the North Pole to Equator; Earth, and the target, has rotated, so it appears that the missile has changed direction. The deflection works the same way for an east-west wind, the path will curve to the right as it moves across the surface. Coreolis effect - wind • Speed of rotation – movement away from poles decreases rotational speed • Deflection due to earth’s rotation – northward moving deflects wind eastward • No Hemisphere – deflect to right, Southern, to left Three-cell circulation model •considers effects of coriolis force due to the Earth’s rotation. •Northern and Southern Hemisphere are each divided into three cells of circulation, each spanning 30 degrees of latitude. •Equator, 30° North and South, and 60° North and South. •Hadley, Ferrel, polar cells •Heat transfer away form equator by atmosphere Hadley Circulation • Tropical air rises, creates low pressure system below • Low level cool air moves in from higher latitudes to replace it • Warm air travels to poles, cools, becomes more dense, sinks • Hadley cell Primary circulation cells and prevailing wind belts of Earth Surface currents • a large mass of continuously moving oceanic • • • water ~40 named currents Do not move in direction of wind Interaction of Coriolis effect, wind and land masses – wind friction on water – uneven sea surface, starts water moving – Coriolis effect deflection – contact with the continents deflect currents, creating giant oceanic current circles or gyres. Gyres – Direction – counterclockwise northern Hemisphere – Indian Ocean exception – West, east sides of gyres – Temperature transfer N-S profound impact – Spiral gyres “pile up” water in center – Antarctic circumpolar current – westerlies blow uninterrupted – Narrow weak counter currents separate gyres - Equatorial countercurrent Subsurface flows • 90% of water mass movement • Density driven • Arctic and Antarctic model – Deep and bottom water, ice melt Eckman Spiral – each sheet of water drags on the one below – net transport is 90o to right (northern hemisphere) of the wind direction