M a r i n e Kailey Park
Contents - Characteristics- Producers- Marine Animals- Coral Reef Food Web- Conservation Issues- Oil Spill- Overfishing
Marine is one of the biggest biome in the world. There are many
different kinds of ocean like the coral reef or the Arctic Ocean.
However, only one thing is same for all the different kinds of marine.
It's the salt water!
Marine
Mandarin FishAngel Fish
Fishes living in the ocean are all adapted to
the salt water. If you place a marine fish to a
fresh water (river, lake, pond, etc...) the salt
water fish would die.
Map
Pacific Ocean
Pacific Ocean
Atlantic Ocean
Arctic Ocean
Arctic Ocean
Indian Ocean
The peaceful North Pacific Ocean is at the east of Asia and West of North America. The Pacific Ocean is the world’s biggest and deepest ocean. The North Pacific Ocean covers more than 30% of the earth's surface. The average depth of the North pacific ocean is 3,800m.
Characteristics
In every biome, the abiotic (non-living) and biotic (living) factors need to be interdependent to survive.
Biome
Abiotic Biotic
EX) The North Pacific Ocean
Most fish that live in the North pacific ocean are adapted to live in warm temperatures. If these fish stay in the cold water, they would die.
The North Pacific ocean's temperature depends on the location. Near the equator, the water is very hot. Water in some regions goes up to 30 degC or 86F. The North Pacific Ocean is warm at almost all times. Sometimes the weather is bad.
Abiotic
Biotic
Most producers live near the spot where there is a lot of sunlight. The plants need sunlight in order to grow from *photosynthesis.
Producers
*Photosynthesis: The process when plants get nutrients from sunlight and more
Oarweed live in rocky shores so their adaptation is that they have clinging roots that attaches itself to underwater stones.
Oarweed
Kelp is a type of seaweed. Kelt lives in cold and shallow waters that has many nutrients. Kelps are adapted to dig deep into the rocks and soil so that they wouldn’t flow away. Also, they are adapted to the sunlight because they have fast growing stem and gas filled compartment (sections) that help to reach sunlight.
Kelp
Gulfweed are brownish yellow seaweed. Gulfweed have berry like bladders that contain gas which helps them to float.
Sea Cabbage are brown algaes. Sea Cabbage are adapted to getting sunlight and transferring it to nutrients they would need to grow, and for the predictors that eats sea cabbage
Sea Cabbage
Gulfweed
Trigger fish uses the abiotic factor waving motions to move because it is
a Nekton. Trigger fish have sharp teeth that helps to eat other marine
animals. Trigger fish protect themselves using camouflage which
confuses it’s predictors. Trigger fish are carnivores and eat shrimps,
crustaceans and invertebrates.
Marine Animals
Most Nettle Jellyfish are found at the west of America. Nettle
Jellyfish has tentacles which has poison or stings to protect itself. With
it’s tentacles, they also catch their prey. Nettle Jellyfish consumes (put
it in body; eat) plankton, crustaceans and larvae of other jellyfish.
Trigger Fish
Nettle Jellyfish
These dolphins are called Pacific White Sided Dolphins because of
how they look. White Sided Dolphins are found in cold, temperate
water. One of their behavioral adaptation is to be in herds or
groups while traveling because they are very gregarious or sociable.
These dolphins love to eat squid.
Silky Sharks love tropical, warm ocean. They have very good sense
of hearing which helps them to locate their prey easily. The silky
shark dive together in large groups of fish then with fast speed,
they attack their prey with their mouths open. They eat Tuna,
octopus and squid.
Pacific White Sided Dolphin
Silky Shark
Coral Reef Food Web
Humans create conservation issues. These issues effect the organisms living in the ocean and humans.
You can follow these steps to help prevent terrible news happening to our special nature:
-Conserving-Cleaning up-Chiming in!
Conservation Issues
Oil Spills happen when a oil tanker (a ship that carries oil from one country to another) leaks oil. Sometimes,illegally, people dump crude oil because they don’t want to spend money on decomposing the waste oil.
Oil Spill
Effects
Oil spilled into the ocean waters are very sticky. Also, oil lowers the animals body temperature which is called hypothermia. Animals get attracted to the sweet smell of the oily water. When they go near the oil, they would be poisoned.
Gulf Of Mexico Oil Spill
Overfishing is when people catch fish faster than the fish can reproduce. It means that people catch more fish then they need. The ocean would be a place without a meaning if all the fish die!
Overfishing About 25% of the world’s captured fish are being killed and thrown back to the ocean. Soon these fish will become endangered.
Effects
If we don’t solve this problem, in the future, there wouldn’t be fish left for us to eat or keep as a pet. When a specie extincts because of overfishing, predators of the extinct fish would have a change in their food chain or food web. The prey that the fish eats would increase and increase until the extinct fish prey eats all of it’s prey, so there wouldn’t be any producer, primary consumer,(etc...) left.
Photos:en.wikipedia.orghtekidsnews.com www.deepseawaters.com http://bioexpedition.com/ocean-biome/commons.wikimedia.orgwww.flickr.comwww.fotopedia.com
Information:http://students.umf.maine.edu/katie.l.thomas/public.www/Oceans%20Webpage/Pacific%20Ocean/creatures.html http://www.torontozoo.com/explorethezoo/AnimalDetails.asp?pg=811 http://education.nationalgeographic.com/media/file/one-ocean-chapter3.pdf http://www.trails.com/list_10999_plants-that-live-ocean.html http://www.ask.com/question/what-kind-of-plants-live-in-the-pacific-oceanhttp://ths.sps.lane.edu/biomes/marine5/marine5.html http://www.buzzle.com/articles/marine-biome-plants.html http://skinnyislandpost.wordpress.com/2011/05/03/koras-portuguese-and-gulfweed/http://eol.org/pages/919354/details http://www.mdsg.umd.edu/topics/jellyfish/jellyfish http://www.marinemammalcenter.org/education/marine-mammal-information/cetaceans/pacific-white-sided-dolphin.html http://www.vanaqua.org/learn/aquafacts/cetaceans/pacific-white-sided-dolphin http://www.technokids.com/documents/intermediate/environment-overfishing-fact-sheet.pdf http://www.eschooltoday.com/overfishing/what-is-overfishing-for-kids.html http://www.eschooltoday.com/overfishing/overfishing-information-for-children.html http://bioexpedition.com/pacific-sea-nettle/ http://saltaquarium.about.com/od/triggerfishprofiles/p/prtriggerfishfamily.htm http://www.dolphins-world.com/pacific-white-sided-dolphin/ http://www.sharksider.com/silky-shark.html http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Rhinecanthus_aculeatus/
Sources
Popplet Sources:Photo: http://australianmuseum.net.au/image/Greenblotch-Parrotfish-at-Redang-Island
http://www.redorbit.com/media/uploads/2012/04/Black-Sea-Urchin-Arbacia-lixula.jpg
http://www.wright.edu/~wayne.carmichael/research-r.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Copepodkils.jpg
http://gillianeberry.blogspot.kr/2013/07/review-and-giveaway-lola-and-boy-next.html http://www3.aims.gov.au/docs/publications/waypoint/001/headlines-01.html
http://life-sea.blogspot.kr/2011/07/life-of-copperband-butterfly-fish.html
http://www.eos.ubc.ca/research/phytoplankton/at_a_glance/images/full/copepod_full.jpg
http://www.dwalls.com/Animals/Animals-Marine-Life/Big-Eye+Squirrel+Fish.jpg.html?g2_imageViewsIndex=1
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Picasso.triggerfish.arp.jpg
http://www.kidzworld.com/article/24170-oil-spills-sad-but-true http://www.kidsvillenews.com/articles/201007/parentown_kidshape/explaining_the_oil_spill_to_children_what_effects_do_oil_spills_have_on_the_environment.aspx http://www.nwf.org/kids/ranger-rick/how-to-talk-with-kids-gulf-oil-spill.aspx
http://www.fantom-xp.com/en_30_~_Eel_recipes.html
http://cerebrovortex.files.wordpress.com/2013/09/octopus-flickr-3658339290-hd.jpg
http://firstworldfacts.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Puffer-Fish.jpeg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Caribbean_reef_shark.jpg
http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/invertebrates/red-crab/
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Blue_mussel_Mytilus_edulis.jpg
Information:
http://www.visitsealife.com/SiteImages/Assets/27/26/Foodchains_Grades3-6.pdf
http://www.coralscience.org/articles/PDF/Coral%20reef%20ecology.pdf
https://www.google.co.kr/search?hl=en-US&tbs=sbi:AMhZZitOF1y0OO6yWlQg6RkovOd8vK4NXDUFJKPR21cXprMtkPI32GKToDa2xz0LdMeaYBktYga-WZRr_1OKTlAqVabpCPJcYloJ8qh-QXlgIjZ3eHLpaB0FZ3KQ39qjzwX8RI5VdXbl5axECmnZQ-7Q7mYpdmF1wvsxSaKojBnFKizWCraN1N4a_1o4Pv5hZPsxnxuXAg_1lh5qQI2Tot57I5P-bc2H8MoE1p0tSKFiCcGRZLNH5TgY10TZCB8FEzMcfkG1QiFm11CUhkBdhfqrTF3mYyeJP7OZCPSXSldL838qpr-UxwPuUYzh46vBMlO3mz2jTr9b38n&ei=LaxVU7XkPMXe8AXAuYHIDw
https://www.google.co.kr/search?hl=en-US&tbs=sbi:AMhZZiviec2xryl6050nUrSpyvfjAzRSgfsR5HmD_1rvcrTxo6pNcLvRAd-6xEzTNuRBBzBnQEuE_1dAlCMjBcqxvGv9bZPTqRL-f7brptsFVahc-FtfjDHYvlAzDRAt_1ufgtsIsDrDi0oxCkJOSv48XlScU2O0548AkDDd2CjKB5zQEo1hpWOEPyJ6k1wdq1GjfYv_1FnKSi5TUMR-MFjclYlMOk-EcmLlpmnXLtLms023gqDv8JEnuyA0epfS2MWB7THuMJ-vYgxvQ8PcwiG5JvD9E1kzhlW8rOcyDLfyBZ0-jSXkQ3sc0dg&ei=QrJVU9-QH8P18QWaloHYAw
http://www.softschools.com/facts/animals/moray_eel_facts/83/
http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/fish/pufferfish/
http://www.nwf.org/wildlife/wildlife-library/invertebrates/sea-cucumber.aspxhttp://scienceforkids.kidipede.com/biology/plants/seaweed/
http://www.hanauma-bay-hawaii.com/triggerfish.html
http://www.divegallery.com/Hawkfish_longnose.htm
http://igutek.scripts.mit.edu/terrascope/?page=Algae
http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2011/feb/23/coral-reef-report-dying-danger
Top Related