Benthic ecosystems Flashcards
Features of benthic ecosystem?
Lowest tide point to 200m.
0-1500km offshore.
Within euphotic zone.
Water above = neritic zone.
Value of benthic ecosystem?
Most heavily exploited area.
Shipping, oil/gas, subsea cables, wind/tidal/wave power, fishing, aquaculture, waste disposal, recreation.
Seasonal thermocline?
Nutrients trapped at surface during summer. Surface waters = nutrient-limited. Benthos = O2 limited. Energy reaches seabed as dead matter.
Physical forcing on continental shelf?
Scraping of past glacial events (eg: Anglesey).
Currents + waves move sediment = hard-bottom.
Sheltered/deep seas = soft-bottom.
Currents/waves affect rate of food supply to benthos.
Water flow affects body shape (high flow = encrusting, flexible, burrowing, Low flow = delicate, branched).
Effect of turbidity on light?
Rivers = turbid = less light.
Algal zonation in deeper, less turbid waters.
Different fauna sizes?
Macrofauna, meiofauna, microbiota.
Meiofauna dominate over macrofauna, but more difficult to study.
Epibenthic, epibiotic, + infaunal?
Bare rock = anchor for epibenthic macroalgae + soft corals.
High-energy habitats = emergent epibiotic + mobile burrowing animals, + hydrostatic invertebrates.
Low-energy habitats = unicellular algae, burrowing infaunal animals, + hydrostatic invertebrates.
Mobile epibenthic biota?
Forage in groups (eg: starfish), move to deep water in winter (eg: spidercrabs), migrate to spawning sites (eg: English Channel plaice migrate to North Sea).
Juveniles have to avoid predators, but bigger adults released from predation.
Scavengers?
Predators often scavengers.
Some herbivores scavenge (eg: sea urchins, brittle stars).
More important in polar latitudes (higher mortality).
Amphipods: Macro-invertebrate scavenger. Important in polar shelf seas. Can get large.
Sea mice (Aphrodita): Epifaunal polychaetes. Predate on crabs, worms + scavenge.
Importance of grazers?
Control pops = biodiversity. Herbivorous fish (low latitudes), snails, urchins (high latitudes). Carnivorous grazers (nudibranchs on soft corals + sponges).
Particle feeders?
Shallow: Feed on phytoplankton. Eg: Oysters, clams, mussels.
Deep: Feed on zooplankton/detritus. Eg: Bryozoans, hydrozoans, sponges.
Sediment processors?
Sea urchins + cucumbers.
Bioturbation?
Bulldozers (gastropods, sea urchins), feeding pits (starfish, stingrays), burrows (shrimp, fish, polychaetes).
Enhance O2 + nutrient cycling to 2m deep = maintains aerobic bacteria.
Increase surface porosity.
Types of habitat on continental shelf?
Sands (47%), muds (37%), broken shell/reef (10%), rocky substrate (6%).
Dominant UK habitat: Sublittoral soft sediment.
Hard bottom communities?
Anchorage for sessile biota (macroalgae, encrusting algae, filter feeders (barnacles, anemones, tunicates).
Competition for space.
- Macroalgae pneumatocysts lift them = more space.