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Nekton

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... and sea otters (order Carnivora) but these occupy inshore waters. Nektonic reptiles of the oceanic are almost exclusively turtles and snakes. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nekton


1
015d
Nekton
2
Nekton
Organisms capable of swimming against a current
3
General characteristics of nekton
  • Larger body size
  • Greater swimming power
  • Most nekton animals are vertebrates, and most
    vertebrates are fish
  • Only the squid and a few species of shrimps are
    truly nektonic invertebrates
  • Few reptiles (turtles and sea snakes), birds
    (penguin) and mammals

4
Importance of Nekton
  • Large nekton can profoundly influence marine
    communities
  • Important in current or historical harvests
  • Fishes of critical importance to world food supply

5
Vertical distribution
  • Epipelagic countershading
  • Countershading a nektonic organism is bicolored,
    dark above and light below
  • Holoepipelagic shark, tuna, ocean sunfish
  • Meroepipelagic herring, salmon

6
Morphological features of nekton at different
vertical zones
  • Mesopelagic
  • Seldom exceed 10 cm
  • Equipped with well developed teeth and large
    mouth
  • Large light-sensitive eyes, uniformly black
  • Photophores light-producing organs
  • Abyssalpelagic
  • Species-specific pattern of photophores
  • Small with flabby, soft, nearly transparent flesh
    supported by weak bones
  • Oversized mouth

7
Major zones of life in a marine ecosystem
8
Nektonic Crustacea
  • Pelagic crabs and shrimp
  • Larger euphausiids
  • Antarctic Krill (Euphausia superba)
  • 5-6 cm long
  • Dominant food of baleen whales
  • Increased fishery for livestock and poultry feeds

9
Euphausia superba
10
Who eats Krill?
11
Krill the Antarctic Food Web
Critical components of Antarctic food webs
12
  • Krill Fishery
  • Annual consumption by natural predators 470
    million MT
  • 1972 Japan and Russia began harvesting krill

13
Krill Fishery
  • Potential harvest 25-30 million MT/yr
  • Economic cost of fishery high
  • Patchy distribution complicates location
  • Depths may be 150-200m
  • Single net haul may collect 10 MT
  • Ecological consequences of removal poorly
    understood

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  • Squids
  • Large size range cm gt 20 m
  • Giant squid (Architeuthis) largest invertebrate
  • Water jet propulsion
  • Highly maneuverable and agile
  • Up to 10 m/s
  • Predators consuming 15-20 body mass per day

16
Giant Squid (Architeuthis dux)
  • One of the largest marine predators
  • Little is known about their ecology
  • Diet deep-sea fishes, orange roughy, hokie
  • Rapid growth full size in 3-5 years with a life
    span of 7 years
  • Predators fishes when squid are young, then
    sperm whales

http//evomech7.blogspot.com/2006/12/japan-researc
hers-film-live-giant.html
17
  • Squid Fisheries
  • 70 of present catch of cephalopods
  • Major source of human food
  • Driftnet fishery began in N. Pacific in 1981
  • Driftnets monofilament panels 8-10 m tall and up
    to 50 km long
  • Set at night and allowed to drift while
    entangling prey

18
Driftnets
  • 1989 Japan, Korea, Taiwan were deploying 800
    driftnet vessels in N. Pacific
  • Harvested 300,000 T squid annually
  • Salmon and tuna also captured as by-catch
  • 750,000-1,000,000 seabirds killed annually
  • 20,000-40,000 marine mammal deaths
  • Destruction to zooplankton not quantified

19
  • Drift-nets
  • 1993 UN General Assembly accepted a resolution
    calling for a moratorium on all high-seas
    drift-netting
  • Some illegal drift-netting continues

20
Marine Reptiles
Saltwater crocodile
Marine iguana
Sea snake
Marine turtle
21
Marine Birds
22
Marine Mammals
23
  • What is the difference between nekton and
    plankton?
  • Describe the krill fishery.
  • Why did the krill catch drop in 1984 and 1993?
  • What is a drift net?
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