Title: Open Oceans: Pelagic Ecosystems
1Open Oceans Pelagic Ecosystems
2Bacterioplankton
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10Elements of an Ecosystem Approach
- What are the components?
- What are the special environmental challenges?
- What are the special adaptations?
- How do we understand form function?
- What are the controlling processes?
- What are the important patterns?
11Pelagic System Components
- The area of open water of oceans, including the
entire water column away from the bottom
substrates - Nutrients and salts
- Plankton
- Nekton
12Dimensions of Variation for Plankton
- Size virus (2 x 10-7 m) to jellyfish (0.2 m)
- Energy processing nutritional modes
- photosynthetic (phytoplankton)
- heterotrophic, ingestive (zooplankton)
- heterotrophic, absorptive (mycoplankton)
- infective (viroplankton)
- Life history variation
- permanent residents
- transient members of the plankton community
13Phytoplankton
Dinoflagellates
Foraminifera
Diatoms
14Coccolithophores
15Coccolithophore bloom, English Channel
20 km
16Mixture of groups producing a bloom
Baltic Sea
1 Coccolithophores 2 Diatoms 3 Eukaryotic
picoplankton
17Diversity of form
18Zooplankton protista
19Zooplankton crustacea
20Copepod
21Zooplankton larvae
22Challenges
- Maintaining access to nutrients, light,
resources - Avoid being food for larger consumers
23Adaptations for maintaining position
- Use water movements
- Convection cells (from diurnal cycles in heat)
- Langmuir convection cells from wind
24Langmuir patterns in the Galapagos
25Adaptations for maintaining position
- Affect buoyancy
- Use lighter ions for osmotic balance (e.g., use
chlorides rather than sulphates) - Develop flotation organs (gas, oils, fats)
- Manipulate resistance (use viscosity)
- parachute morphology
- elaborate appendages
26Global scale patterns of pelagic productivity
27What are controlling processes?
- Primary Productivity
- Different estimates of productivity
- Gross Primary Productivity
- Net Primary Productivity
- Standing crop
- and Grazing Rates
28What is productivity?
- primary productivity is defined as the total
quantity of carbon fixed by autotrophs - a rate expressed as grams of carbon fixed per
square meter of sea-surface per unit of time - gross primary production is the total amount of
organic matter produced by autotrophs - net primary production is the energy remaining
after respiratory needs have been met - NPP Gross Primary Production - Respiration
29Questions to consider
- Why should we care about patterns of biological
productivity in oceans? - What are the spatial patterns of productivity?
- What mechanisms promote or limit productivity?
30Why should we care about productivity?
- Photosynthetic activity in oceans created current
O2-rich atmosphere - Plankton form ocean sediments fossil fuels
- Plankton are a critical part of carbon pump
that influences atmospheric CO2 - Phytoplankton form the base of food webs and
associated biological diversity - Limits to productivity may limit the amount of
harvestable biomass from ocean ecosystems
31Measuring Primary Productivity Data
- Standing crop methods
- Chlorophyll concentration (water extraction,
satellite) - Cell counts (flow cytometers)
- Rate measurements
- Light-dark bottle method
- Carbon-14 uptake
- Advantages disadvantages
32chlorophyll density temperature
33Link between producers grazers
34Measuring Primary Productivity Inferences
- Simple models integrate different parameters to
estimate rates of productivity - Model components (Field et al. Science
281237-240) - chlorophyll concentration
- water depth in photic zone
- fraction of water column where photosynthesis is
light-saturated - surface temperature
35Results of productivity model
36Some patterns
- average primary productivity in the oceans is 50
g C/m2/yr - 300 g C/m2/yr considered relatively high rate of
primary productivity - low rates of primary productivity typically 20 to
30 g C/m2/yr