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Water, water, everywhere

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Water, water, everywhere Which organisms occur at a given place in the marine environment is determined by the physical and chemical properties of the surrounding water – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Water, water, everywhere


1
Water, water, everywhere
  • Which organisms occur at a given place in the
    marine environment is determined by the physical
    and chemical properties of the surrounding water
  • Marine organisms depend on water for metabolic
    demands, but also as a medium through which they
    must travel, hunt, reproduce, avoid predation,
    find mates, etc.

2
The unique properties of water
  • Water is the only substance that occurs naturally
    in all 3 phases solid, liquid and gas
  • In liquid water, hydrogen bonds hold most of the
    molecules together

Hydrogen bonds
3
  • Recall that in a water molecule, two hydrogen
    atoms share electrons with an oxygen atom,
    completing the outer shell of all 3 atoms

H
4
  • But the electrons do not spend an equal amount of
    time with hydrogen as they do oxygen






5
  • This is because oxygen has 8 protons in its
    nucleus,
    while hydrogen only has 1
  • Remember that opposites attract. The difference
    in positive
    charges pulls the
    shared electrons
    toward oxygen, and
    away from
    the two
    hydrogen atoms






6
  • The abundance of electrons near oxygen makes the
    oxygen atom in a water molecule slightly negative
  • Likewise, the 2
    hydrogen atoms
    become slightly
    positive
    since their
    shared electrons
    spend so little
    time
    near them

(-)










7
  • A water molecule is said to be polar in that it
    has two ends of opposing charges a slightly
    positive charge near the hydrogen atoms, and a
    slightly negative charge near the oxygen atom

(-)
O
H
H
8
Water Heat Capacity
HEAT
9
Water Heat Capacity
HEAT
10
Water Heat Capacity
  • We experience the benefits of waters high heat
    capacity every time we sweat.
  • Our body provides the heat to evaporate water
    from a liquid to a gas (water vapor), keeping us
    cool
  • This is the same reason why
    dogs pant and pigs
    wallow in
    the mud!

11
Waters amazing properties
  • Water is unique in that it naturally exists in
    all phases (gas, liquid, solid) on Earth
  • Water is also unique in that its solid phase
    (ice) is less dense than its liquid phase (water)

12
The unique properties of water
  • As water cools, the movement of the molecules
    slows and they pack together more tightly
  • Colder liquid water is denser than warmer water
  • Water freezes when the molecules
    move so slowly that the
    hydrogen bonds take over,
    locking the molecules into
    a 3-dimensional pattern

13
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14
  • Because the same mass of water now occupies more
    volume as ice than as liquid water, ice is less
    dense than liquid water and floats
  • Extremely unusual and very important for aquatic
    (freshwater and marine) organisms living on, in,
    or beneath the ice!

15
Got water?
  • In ice, the water molecules are held together by
    the hydrogen bonds in the ice crystal
  • When ice melts, energy (in the form of heat) is
    required to break the hydrogen bonds and to
    increase the speed of the molecules
  • Because of the hydrogen bonds, more heat is
    required to melt ice or to convert liquid water
    into water vapor gives water a high heat
    capacity how much heat is needed to raise a
    substances temperature by 1 degree

16
What does this mean for marine life?
  • Because of waters high heat capacity, marine
    organisms do not experience sudden swings in
    temperature that may occur on land (although
    shallow water ecosystems are more vulnerable)
  • Because of waters hydrogen bonds, water is also
    an excellent solvent water can dissolve more
    things than any other natural substance

17
Ion in solution
Salt crystal
18
Seawater
  • The oceans contain enough salt to cover the
    entire planet with a layer more than 500 feet
    thick!
  • The salts in seawater come from the chemical
    weathering of rocks (via river flow) and the
    out-gassing of hydrothermal vents
  • The total amount of solid material dissolved in
    water is a measure of its salinity

19
Salinity of seawater
  • The salinity of seawater is typically 3.5
  • A salinity of 3.5 indicates that seawater
    contains 96.5 pure water and 3.5 solutes
  • Only 6 ions compose 99 of the solids dissolved
    in seawater, and of these sodium and chloride
    account for 85
  • More commonly, salinity is referred to as parts
    per thousand or (3.5 35)

20
Could you please pass the salt
  • The salinity of water greatly affects the
    organisms that live in it
  • Most marine organisms will die in freshwater, and
    vice versa (well come back to this)
  • Salinity also influences the density of seawater
    the saltier the water, the denser it is
  • The density of seawater therefore depends on its
    salinity and its temperature

21
Dissolved gases in seawater
  • Gases in the air easily dissolve in seawater at
    the oceans surface
  • Organisms living in the ocean require these
    dissolved gases to survive
  • The major gases in seawater are
  • Nitrogen (N2)
  • Oxygen (O2)
  • Carbon dioxide (CO2)

22
Dissolved gases in seawater Nitrogen
  • Nitrogen constitutes 48 of the dissolved gases
    in seawater
  • Nitrogen is essential for organisms and can be a
    limiting factor for phytoplankton
  • Most dissolved Nitrogen is unusable since it
    exists as N2 gas, a form that cannot be
    assimilated by most organisms
  • Nitrogen can be a pollutant when added to
    seawater in large quantities!

23
Dissolved gases in seawater Oxygen
  • Oxygen constitutes 36 of the gases dissolved in
    seawater
  • Oxygen is essential for all aerobic life forms
  • Dissolved oxygen comes from photosynthesis and
    diffusion from the atmosphere
  • Gases, such as oxygen, dissolve better in colder
    water than in warm water, and so concentrations
    are highest in polar waters and in colder, deeper
    seawater

24
Dissolved gases in seawater Carbon Dioxide
  • Carbon dioxide comprises 15 of the dissolved
    gases in seawater and is much more soluble in
    seawater than oxygen
  • CO2 is low at the surface and increases with
    depth
  • O2 is high at the surface and decreases with
    depth
  • Why???

25
  • CO2 is used near the surface and produced at
    depth
  • O2 is produced near the surface and used at depth

26
Ocean AcidificationThe other CO2 problem
  • The ocean stores 50 times as much CO2 as the
    atmosphere!
  • CO2 reacts chemically with water when it
    dissolves forming H2CO3 (carbonic acid),
    therefore seawater can hold a tremendous amount
    of CO2
  • The acidity of the oceans has increased by 30
    since the Industrial Revolution!

27
Normal Ca CO3- ? CaCO3 ?
Acidic H Ca CO3- ? HCO3- Ca2 ?
28
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vkxPwbhFeZSw
29
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30
Let there be light!
  • One of the most biologically important properties
    of seawater is its transparency, allowing
    sunlight to penetrate into the water
  • This is vital because all photosynthetic
    organisms need light to grow and survive
  • Sunlight contains all the colors of the rainbow,
    but not all the colors penetrate seawater equally

31
Increasing energy
105 nm
103 nm
1 nm
103 nm
106 nm
1 m
103 m
Radio waves
Micro- waves
Gamma rays
Infrared
X-rays
UV
Visible light
380
400
750
500
600
700
Wavelength (nm)
650 nm
32
Light waves with shorter wavelengths contain more
energy and penetrate deeper than those with
longer wavelengths. However, by 300 meters, even
blue light has been absorbed and darkness prevails
33
You light up my life
  • Where light penetrates, photosynthesis proceeds
    very important!
  • The thin film of sunlit water at the top of the
    surface zone is the photic zone and is dependent
    on the amount of suspended material in the water
  • lt100 meters in open ocean
  • lt40 meters in coastal regions
  • lt600 meters in clear tropical regions

34
Hey, who turned off the lights???
  • Ocean below the photic zone lies in blackness
  • Except for light generated by living organisms,
    the region is in perpetual darkness
  • This dark water beneath the photic zone is known
    as the aphotic zone
  • Dark
  • Cold
  • High pressure

35
Deep-sea shrimp Survival adaptation
Eggs are red, too!
36
Sea no evil, hear no evil
  • Sound travels nearly 5 times faster underwater
    than on land (in the air)
  • In water, sound is transmitted by water
    molecules since water molecules are densely
    packed (more so than molecules in air), they
    transmit sound more quickly
  • Because sound waves travel more efficiently
    underwater than light waves, marine organisms
    frequently rely on sound (hearing), much more so
    than light
    (vision)

37
Talk about singin the blues
  • Blue whales produce deep rumbling sounds deep,
    low-pitched sounds that are the loudest noise
    produced by any animal
  • You will feel a blue whale vocalization before
    you ever hear it
  • Whale vocalizations can travel over entire ocean
    basins!!!

38
Under Pressure
  • Another factor that changes dramatically with
    depth is pressure
  • Organisms on land are exposed to 1 atmosphere of
    pressure at sea level
  • Marine organisms, on the other hand, are under
    the weight of the water above them and as well as
    the atmosphere
  • Pressure increases dramatically with depth for
    every 10 meters of increased depth, another
    atmosphere of pressure is added

39
Under Pressure
  • As pressure increases, gases are compressed
  • Gas-filled structures inside organisms, such as
    air bladders, floats, and lungs shrink or
    collapse under the pressure
  • Limits the depth range of many organisms
  • Others have evolved
    physiological adaptations
    to survive in the depths
    (well come back to
    this)

40
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