L8-phytoplankton,diversity,size,taxa,alage blooms Flashcards

1
Q

Where do phytoplankton live?

A

upper, sunlit layers of ocean

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2
Q

What is total biomass of phytoplankton?

A

outweighs that of all marine animals.

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3
Q

What proportion of world’s primary productivity is phytoplankton?

A

40-50%

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4
Q

Are phytoplankton monophyletic?

A

no many different groups

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5
Q

How much of phytoplankton is sequestered?

A

1%

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6
Q

How well known is phytoplankton diversity?

A

not at all very little research on them

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7
Q

What are the main phytoplankton phyla?

A

Cyanobacteria1
Diatoms
Haptophytes (include coccolithophorids)3
Dinoflagellates

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8
Q

Eukaryotic phytoplankton belong

to 5 evolutionary lineages

A

Alveolates

  1. Stramenopiles
  2. Rhodophyta
  3. Green Plants
  4. Other Protists
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9
Q

How are phytoplankton phyla characterised?

A
photosynthetic pigments
chloroplast structure
energy reserves
cell wall chemistry
flagella ultrastructure
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10
Q

What size is nanoplankton?

A
  1. 0 - 20 um

e. g. Emiliania huxleyi A coccolithophorid

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11
Q

What proportion is Nanoplankton?

A

55% of phytoplankton biomass

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12
Q

What size is Picoplankton?

A

[0.2 - 2.0 m

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13
Q

What size is Microplankton?

A

[20 - 200 m

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14
Q

How much of primary productivity are diatoms?

A

40% marine primary productivity

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15
Q

What are diatoms cell walls features?

A

complex
made of silica
biogeochemical cycling of silica

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16
Q

What is diatom Ooze?

A

When diatoms die they sink to the bottom of the ocean
where they accumulate (1-3 cm/1000 years).
•The slow dissolution of silica and high productivity of
some diatoms lead to the accumulation of oozes.

17
Q

Coccolithophorids Characteristics?

A

flagella: 2 smooth
haptonema (food capture, attachment organelle)
cell covering of calcareousscales (CaCO3) ‘coccoliths’

18
Q

Emiliania huxleyi (Ehux) features?

A

• most abundant coccolithophorid - globally
• extremely widespread - most oceans.
• usually outnumbers all other species
combined (can be 80-90%+ phytoplankton)
• many free-floating coccoliths (due to overproduction, death)

19
Q

What forms chalk?

A

coccolithophorids

20
Q

What are algal blooms?

A

refer to the overgrowth of macroalgae and/or phytoplankton in response to natural or human-induced changes to the environment.

21
Q

What causes fish kills?

A

low oxygen due to bacteria feeding on dead algae from algae blooms

22
Q

Why are blue green algae a problem?

A

massive bloms

Produces hepatotoxins can accumulate

23
Q

What are the main organisms in harmful algae blooms?

A

Dinoflagellates

24
Q

how much of a bloom are autotrophic?

A

50% autotrophic

25
Q

When are Harmful algal blooms initiated?

A
higher temperatures (late summer) cause cysts in
sediments to germinate
26
Q

What favours population growth?

A

 high irradiance
 low salinity
 excess nutrients (N & P)
 vertical migrations optimise use of light & nutrients
 toxins and growth inhibitors inhibit other species
 stable water column

27
Q

What will happen to blooming species with climate change?

A

increase as favoured by higher temp
more agricultural runoff
hard surface(eg. rodas) cause more runoff

28
Q

How do dead zones form?

A
fresh water brings nutrient input
algae bloom
algae die and are eaten by bacteria
oxygen depleted
fish die
29
Q

How common are dead zones?

A

number of Dead Zones in the world’s oceans is increasing dramatically