Rabu, 15 Juni 2011

DEFINITION OF BENTHIC

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The benthic environment includes the ocean floor,

and the benthos are those organisms that dwell on or near

the seafloor. Bottom-dwelling benthos organisms include

large plants that grow in shallow water, as well as animals

that dwell on the seafloor at all depths.

Many of the sediments on the deep seafloor are derived

from erosion of the continents and carried to the deep sea by

turbidity currents, carried by wind (e.g., volcanic ash), or

released from floating ice. Other sediments, known as deepsea

oozes, include pelagic sediments derived from marine

organic activity. When small organisms die, such as diatoms

in the ocean, their shells sink to the bottom and over time can

make significant accumulations. Calcareous ooze occurs at

low to middle latitudes where warm water favors the growth

of carbonate-secreting organisms. Calcareous oozes are not

found in water that is more than 2.5–3 miles (4–5 km) deep

because this water is under such high pressure that it contains

a lot of dissolved CO2, which dissolves carbonate shells.

Siliceous ooze is produced by organisms that use silicon to

make their shell structure.

The benthic world is amazingly diverse yet parts of the

deep seafloor are less explored than the surface of the Moon.

Organisms that live in the benthic community generally use

one or more of three main strategies for living. Some attach

themselves to anchored surfaces and get food by filtering it

from the seawater. Other organisms move freely about on the

ocean bottom and get their food by predation. Still others

burrow or bury themselves in the ocean bottom sediments

and get nourishment by digesting and extracting nutrients

from the benthic sediments. All the benthic organisms must

compete for living space and food, with other factors including

light levels, temperature, salinity, and the nature of the

bottom controlling the distribution and diversity of some

organisms. Species diversification is related to the stability of

the benthic environment. Areas that experience large fluctuations

in temperature, salinity, and water agitation tend to

have low species diversification, but they may have large

numbers of a few different types of organisms. In contrast,

stable environments tend to show much greater diversity with

a larger number of species present.

There are a large number of different benthic environments.

Rocky shore environments in the intertidal zone have

a wide range of conditions from alternately wet and dry to

always submerged, with wave agitation and predation being

important factors. These rocky shore environments tend to

show a distinct zonation in benthos, with some organisms

inhabiting one narrow niche, and other organisms in others.

Barnacles and other organisms that can firmly attach themselves

to the bottom do well in wave-agitated environments,

whereas certain types of algae prefer areas from slightly

above the low tide line to about 33 feet (10 m) deep. The

area around the low tide mark tends to be inhabited by abundant

organisms, including snails, starfish, crabs, mussels, sea

anemones, urchins, and hydroids. Tide pools are highly variable

environments that host specialized plants and animals

including crustaceans, worms, starfish, snails, and seaweed.

The subtidal environment may host lobster, worms, mollusks,

and even octopus. Kelp, which are a brown benthic algae,

inhabit the subtidal zone in subtropical to subpolar waters.

Kelp can grow down to a depth of about 130 feet (40 m),

often forming thick underwater forests that may extend along

a coast for many kilometers.

Sandy and muddy bottom benthic environments often

form at the edges of deltas, sandy beaches, marshes, and estuaries.

Many of the world’s temperate to tropical coastlines

have salt marshes in the intertidal zone, and beds of sea

grasses growing just below the low-tide line. Surface dwelling

organisms in these environments are known as epifauna,

whereas organisms that bury themselves in the bottom sand

and mud are called infauna. Many of these organisms obtain

nourishment either by filtering seawater that they pump

though their digestive system, or by selecting edible particles

from the seafloor. Deposit-feeding bivalves such as clams

inhabit the area below the low tide mark, whereas other

deposit feeders may inhabit the intertidal zone. Other organisms

that inhabit these environments include shrimp, snails,

oysters, tube-building crustaceans, and hydroids.

Coral reefs are special benthic environments that require

warm water greater than 64.4°F (18°C) to survive. Colonial

animals secrete calcareous skeletons, placing new active layers

on top of the skeletons of dead organisms, and thus build

the reef structure. Encrusting red algae, as well as green and

red algae, produces the calcareous cement of the coral reefs.

The reef hosts a huge variety and number of other organisms,

some growing in symbiotic relationships with the reef

builders, others seeking shelter or food among the complex

reef. Nutrients are brought to the reef by upwelling waters

and currents. The currents release more nutrients produced

by the reef organisms. Some of the world’s most spectacular

coral reefs include the Great Barrier Reef off the northeast

coast of Australia, reefs along the Red Sea, Indonesia, and in

the Caribbean and South Florida.

Unique forms of life were recently discovered deep in the

ocean near hot vents located along the mid-ocean ridge system.

The organisms that live in these benthic environments are

unusual in that they get their energy from chemosynthesis of

sulfides exhaled by hot hydrothermal vents, and not from photosynthesis

and sunlight. The organisms that live around these

vents include tube worms, sulfate-reducing chemosynthetic

bacteria, crabs, giant clams, mussels, and fish. The tube worms

grow to enormous sizes, some being 10 feet in length and

0.8–1.2 inches wide (3 m long and 2–3 cm wide). Some of the

bacteria that live near these vents include the most heat-tolerant

(thermophyllic) organisms recognized on the planet, living

at temperatures of up to 235°F (113°C). They are thought to

be some of the most primitive organisms known, being both

chemosynthetic and thermophyllic, and may be related to

some of the oldest life-forms that inhabited the Earth.

The deep seafloor away from the mid-ocean ridges and

hot vents is also inhabited by many of the main groups of

animals that inhabit the shallower continental shelves. However,

the number of organisms on the deep seafloor is few,

and the size of the animals tends to be much smaller than

those found at shallower levels. Some deep-water benthos

similar to the hot-vent communities have recently been discovered

living near cold vents above accretionary prisms at

subduction zones, near hydrocarbon vents on continental

shelves, and around decaying whale carcasses.

See also BEACH; BLACK SMOKER CHIMNEYS; CONTINENTAL

MARGIN.

benthos See BENTHIC.

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