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Marine Mammals & Birds

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009b Marine Mammals & Birds Marine mammals Characteristics of marine mammals: Warm-blooded Breathe air Have hair (or fur) Bear live young Females have mammary glands ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Marine Mammals & Birds


1
009b
Marine Mammals Birds
2
  • Return to the Oceans
  • Mammals have returned to the oceans multiple
    times
  • Adaptations
  • vivipary
  • suckling young
  • thermoregulation
  • feeding
  • diving
  • osmoregulation
  • Well look at adaptation in marine mammals from
    the least to the most

3
  • Adaptations for diving
  • Exchange a large amount of air on each breath
  • Up to 90 in each breath (humans exchange about
    20)
  • Blood with more oxygen carrying capacity
  • Heart rate slows
  • Blood flow shunted
  • Higher concentration of myoglobin in the muscles
  • Collapsing lungs
  • Dive with no air in contact with blood vessels to
    avoid problems of nitrogen being forced in

4
Fusiform Shape and Streamlining Evolutionary
Convergence
5
  • Two basic bioenergetic strategies used by animals
  • Endothermy warm blooded
  • Ectothermy cold blooded

6
Thermoregulation
Concurrent exchange
Countercurrent exchange
7
Marine Birds
8
Salt Excretion in Birds
9
  • Penguins
  • 17 species found in southern hemisphere
  • Spends 75 of lifetime in water

10
  • Penguin Adaptations
  • Heavy, solid bones for diving
  • Watertight feathers (up to 70 per sq. in.)
  • Blubber for insulation
  • Oil gland for coating feathers
  • Black white counter shading
  • Deep divers
  • - 500 m, 15 min.
  • Paddle-like feet
  • Streamline, fusiform body
  • - 15 mph
  • Social

11
Altruism
12
Nesting
13
Nests on pack ice
14
Rookery

15
Marine Mammals
16
Marine mammals
  • Characteristics of marine mammals
  • Warm-blooded
  • Breathe air
  • Have hair (or fur)
  • Bear live young
  • Females have mammary glands that produce milk for
    their young

17
Marine mammals Order Sirenia
  • Sirenian characteristics
  • Large body size
  • Sparse hair all over body
  • Vegetarians
  • Toenails (on manatees only)
  • Includes
  • Manatees
  • Dugongs

18
Manatee Dugong
  • Most complete transition to marine life along
    with whales and dolphins
  • Related to the elephant, but common ancestor
    didnt look like either of them
  • Once many more species around
  • Large layer of blubber
  • Origin of the mermaid myth
  • Herbivores
  • Nostrils on top of snout have valves to keep
    water out
  • Both species have one calf at a time
  • Tend to have a single calf every 3 years

19
Dugong
  • Location coastal and inland waters of the
    western Indo-Pacific region
  • Dugongs are exclusively marine and have a
    dolphin-like tail
  • Dugongs tend to dig seagrass rhizomes
  • Predator includes tiger sharks

20
10,000
Dugong Range
21
Family Dugongidae
Dugong dugong
Steller's Sea CowtHydrodamalis gigas Discovered
1741, extinct 1768.
8.9 ft, 551-661lbs
30ft, 4.4 tons
22
Manatee
  • Location Florida, Central and South America
  • Manatees have paddle-like tails and frequent
    freshwater
  • Manatees tend to crop and grab with prehensile
    lips
  • Manatees are larger than dugongs
  • Few predators
  • Threats
  • Careless boaters
  • Habitat loss

23
Manatee
9.8 ft, 800-1200lbs
3,000 in U.S.
24
Relationship between Sirenians and elephants
(mtDNA)
Asian elephant
African elephant
tmammoth
tmastadon
tStellars sea cow
Dugong
Ancestral mammals
West Indian manatee
Brazilian manatee
West African manatee
Other mammals
80
60
40
20
0
Million of years before present
25
Marine mammals Order Carnivora
  • All members of order Carnivora have prominent
    canine teeth
  • Includes
  • Sea otters
  • Polar bears
  • Pinnipeds (flipper-footed)
  • Walrus
  • Seals
  • Sea lions/fur seals

Hawaiian Monk Seal
26
Sea Otter
27
Sea Otter
  • Enhydra lutris
  • Native to north Pacific
  • 394,000 hairs/cm2
  • No blubber
  • Female 45 lbs Male 65lbs
  • Diet Sea urchins, abalone, mussels, clams,
    crabs, snails and about 40 other marine species.
  • Uses tools
  • Dives to 330 ft
  • Rests in coastal kelp forests

28
Polar Bear
Pop size 22,000 to 27,000 Weight 550 to 1,700
pounds
29
Polar Bear
  • Ursa maritimus
  • United States, Canada, Russia, Greenland and on
    the Arctic islands of Norway
  • Male 10 feet tall and weigh over 1400 lbs
  • Female seven feet and weigh 650 lbs
  • wild polar bears live up to age 25.
  • Good swimmers
  • Thick blubber
  • Thick fur

30
  • Polar bears
  • Polar bears are the least adapted to the marine
    lifestyle
  • Land animals that are adapted to the cold
  • Considered marine mammals because they feed
    almost exclusively on marine organisms
  • Very good swimmers, but cant dive below surface
    well
  • Hunt seals and walruses, occasionally cetaceans

31
  • Range
  • Circumpolar in Arctic
  • Range depends on sea ice
  • normal range          occasional range over
    pack occasional range over permanent ice

32
Pinnipeds
33
Pinnipeds
Hawaiian Monk Seal
Family Phocidae
Walrus
Sea Lion
Family Odobenidae
Family Otariidae
34
Biology and Natural History
  • Order Pinniped (seals, sea lions, walruses)
  • Family Phocidae- true, earless seals
  • Family Otariidae- eared seals and sea lions
  • Family Odobenidae- walruses
  • 34 known species
  • Evolved 20 mya from Order Carnivora (ancestors of
    dogs and bears)
  • Differ in possession of external ears and mode of
    locomotion

35
Differences between seals and sea lions/fur seals
36
Hawaiian Monk Seal
Family Phocidae
  • Lack external ears
  • Hind flippers propel them while swimming
  • Front flippers act as rudders
  • Travel on land is difficult (wiggle)

37
Sea Lion
Family Otariidae
  • Eared seals
  • Front flippers propel animal when swimming
  • Rear flippers act as rudders
  • Fairly mobile on land

38
Walrus
Family Odobenidae
  • Found in Arctic region
  • Lack external ears
  • Paddle with front flippers
  • Rear flippers act as a rudder
  • Fairly mobile on land

39
Walrus Range Map
Pacific walrus is in lavender, Atlantic walrus is
in rose.
40
Walrus Facts
  • Location
  • Bering sea, Pacific Ocean, Atlantic Ocean, Arctic
    Ocean
  • Pop Size
  • 250,000
  • Size
  • Weight 2,000-3,500 lb.
  • Breeding
  • Sexually mature late
  • females, usually 6-7 years
  • males, 15 years.
  • Produce few offspring

41
Walrus Facts
  • Lifestyle
  • Habit Gregarious, living mainly in herds.
  • Diet Benthic suction feeders. Feed mainly on
    bivalve mollusks, but also other invertebrate
    marine animals, fish, sometimes seals and whales.
  • Predators polar bears, killer whales, and humans
  • Lifespan Up to 40 years.

42
Walrus Facts
  • Swim speed 7-35 kph
  • Tusks
  • Both male female
  • Used for dragging body across land or ice
  • Symbolize age, sex, and social status
  • Pharyngeal pockets
  • 2 found on either side of the esophagus that hold
    up to 50 liters of air ).
  • For buoyancy these pockets facilitate sleep in
    the water in an upright position
  • May be used to amplify mating calls

43
Whales, Dolphins, Porpoise
44
Pakicetus attocki
Age Early Eocene, 50 million years old Location
Pakistan
45
Whale Evolution
46
Ambulocetus natans in action. A reconstruction of
an early close cousin of whales.
47
Marine mammals Order Cetacea
48
Marine mammals Order Cetacea
  • Cetacean characteristics
  • Blowholes on top of skull
  • Skull telescoped (streamlined shape)
  • Very few hairs
  • Includes
  • Whales, dolphins, and porpoises

49
Two suborders of order Cetacea
(55 mya- entered sea)
  • Suborder Odontoceti (toothed whales)
  • Echolocate (send sound through water)
  • Includes killer whale, sperm whale, dolphins,
    porpoises, and many others
  • Suborder Mysticeti (baleen whales)
  • Have rows of baleen plates instead of teeth
  • Includes blue whale, finback whale, humpback
    whale, gray whale, and many others

50
Differences between dolphins and porpoises
  • Dolphins have
  • An elongated snout (rostrum)
  • A sickle-shaped (falcate) dorsal fin
  • Conical-shaped teeth

Killer whale jawbone
51
Differences between dolphins and porpoises
  • Porpoises have
  • A blunt snout (rostrum)
  • A triangle-shaped dorsal fin
  • Spade-shaped teeth

52
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53
  • Echolocation
  • Sensing environment
  • Produce clicks that travel out, hit objects and
    reflect back
  • Produced by a structure in the airway called the
    monkey lips
  • Sound received through the lower jaw
  • Low frequency clicks travel further but can only
    be used for big objects
  • High frequency clicks can discriminate small
    objects but dont travel as far

54
Deepest Diver
(3km1.5 miles)
55
Mysticeti The baleen whales
  • Mysticeti whales have baleen instead of teeth
  • Baleen plates
  • Hang as parallel rows from the upper jaw
  • Are made of keratin
  • Are used as a strainer to capture zooplankton
  • Allows baleen whales to eat krill and small fish
    by the ton

56
Baleen
57
Types of baleen whales
  • Baleen whales include three families
  • Gray whale (a bottom-feeder with short baleen)
  • Rorqual whales (medium-sized baleen)
  • Balaenopterids (blue whales, finback whales, and
    other large whales )
  • Megapterids (humpback whales)
  • Right whales (surface skimmers with long baleen)

58
Whale Migration
59
Whale Carcass Removal
http//perp.com/whale/video.nc.html
60
  • What characteristics distinguishes the three
    groups of pinnipeds?
  • Why do whales migrate to Hawaii?
  • What is echolocation?
  • Which marine mammals lack blubber?
  • Why are penguins black and white?
  • What is the difference between an odontocete and
    mysticete?
  • Why dont whales get the bends?
  • Why shouldnt you load a dead whale with
    dynamite?
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