comparative aspects of the biology of the arctic and antarctic marine ecosystems

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Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

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Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems. The Arctic is an ocean surrounded by land. The Antarctic is a continent surrounded by ocean. High Arctic brackish. Boreal littoral. High Arctic Shallow. Zones of the High Arctic Marine Ecosystem. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine

ecosystems

Page 2: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

The Arctic is an ocean surrounded by land.

The Antarctic is a continent surrounded by ocean.

Page 3: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

High Arctic Shallow

High Arctic Abyssal

High Arctic brackish Boreal littoral

Zones of the High Arctic Marine Ecosystem

Page 4: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

Characteristics of the Arctic Marine Ecosystem:- 1-2 million years old - marine fauna mainly derived from N. Atlantic- low degree of endemism (no endemic genera)- absence of intertidal fauna- reduction in productivity away from continental shelf

- ice-covered, stratified layers, reduced mixing- long circulation time

- important factors influencing life processes- light: cyclical availability- importance of euphotic zone- nutrients: phosphates, silicates, nitrates- rivers refurbish nutrients coastally in summer

- critical importance of epontic (subice) productivity- 15-30% of total productivity- protracted phytoplankton “bloom”- influenced by snow cover & multiyear ice

- terrestrial predators, diversity of birds and mammals

Page 5: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

The importance of epontic (subice) productivity to pagophilic species and to

those that feed near the ice edge

Ambio 1989

Page 6: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

Key speciesin the Arcticmarine foodweb

Page 7: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems
Page 8: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

Typical coastal shore lead in the Beaufort Sea

Winds that alternate between “onshore” and “offshore” maintain coastal shorelead polynya systems along the coastlines of the mainland, Hudson Bay, and high arctic archipelagos.

Page 9: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

Distribution of arctic seabird colonies in relation to recurring polynyas and shoreleads

M. Mallory

Page 10: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

Characteristics of the Antarctic Marine Ecosystem:

- coldest, driest, windiest and least accessible area- I/10th of earth’s surface, 98% ice-covered- -89o C, coldest temperature on polar plateau- ice in middle of continent 3 km thick- 20-40 million years old, many different species- high degree of endemism (70-90% in various groups)- absence of intertidal fauna- most ocean north of 70o N- ice cover much more variable, 90%annual change

- 50% annual change in the Arctic- prevailing winds from south stimulate ice production and sinking of cold water along coast, and coastal polynyas- no terrestrial predators, replaced by marine predators

- must swim or fly to reach continent - low diversity of birds and mammals- feed from the sea at some level

Page 11: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

Maximum iceCover – October

Minimum iceCover – February

Page 12: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems
Page 13: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems
Page 14: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

EuphausiasuperbaThe Antarctic krill

Page 15: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

Key species inthe Antarcticmarine foodweb

Page 16: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems
Page 17: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

Weddell seal feeding on an Antarctic tooth fish – Dissostichus mawsoni

Page 18: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems

Emperor penguins “flying” underwateras they search for food

Page 19: Comparative aspects of the biology of the Arctic and Antarctic marine ecosystems