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11/22/2020

Coral Bleaching

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coral Reef Health


Through this class we will learn how environmental change affects the ecosystem of a coral reef and explain what coral bleaching is.

We may then practice our language skills by reading an article, participating in a class presentation, and writing down an explanation of coral bleaching.


Please write down an example of energy transfer 


Examples of energy transfer in biology:

Food web or trophic levels, sound waves, electrical currents in electric eels, photosynthesis,

Trophic level visual:
Picture
https://www.nationalgeographic.org/photo/marine-food-pyramid-1/

Sound Wave Energy Transfer
​
Picture
https://phys.libretexts.org/Bookshelves/University_Physics/Book%3A_University_Physics_(OpenStax)/Map%3A_University_Physics_I_-_Mechanics_Sound_Oscillations_and_Waves_(OpenStax)/17%3A_Sound/17.03%3A_Speed_of_Sound


Photosynthesis

Picture

https://cnx.org/contents/24nI-KJ8@20.27:dEoGMkIy/Overview-of-Photosynthesis


Review what coral is


Picture
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/455004368594648187/



​Please read the following article:
​
​https://www.nationalgeographic.org/article/coral-reefs/
​


Who lives there?


Picture

Coral Reef Food Web:


https://www.nationalgeographic.org/media/coral-reef-food-web/


WHat is coral bleaching?



Bleaching
 occurs when warm ocean water stresses corals to the point that they expel the tiny algae, known as zooxanthellae, that normally live inside their tissues. The algae provide the corals with most of their food, as well as their color. If the heat stress is lessened soon enough, the coral can recover.

https://www.nationalgeographic.com/news/2016/03/160321-coral-bleaching-great-barrier-reef-climate-change/#:~:text=Bleaching%20occurs%20when%20warm%20ocean,enough%2C%20the%20coral%20can%20recover.
​


ph Scale


Picture

​https://www.sciencenewsforstudents.org/article/scientists-say-ph


Picture
https://www.climate.gov/news-features/features/upwelling-crisis-ocean-acidification


coral Restoration



​Assignment:

Please write an explanation for coral bleaching using the information from class.
​

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11/14/2020

Sea to Land Transition

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From the deep sea to the seashore


The average ocean depth is 2.3 miles, or 12,100 feet, or
3,688 meters, most of the hydrothermal vents that have been studied have been more than 2000 meters below the surface of the ocean.


These are some modern day deep sea creatures:


Geological TIme Scale


Picture

​http://www.vce.bioninja.com.au/aos-4-change-over-time/evolution/geological-time-scale.html

The source of genetic diversity is a mystery



It is possible that fungal spores came from space on an asteroid or meteor, fungi spores are able to survive in the vacuum of space.  The fungi were possibly eaten by Earth creatures and more genetic code was introduced.
​


Insects and fellow land dwelling arthropods, crustaceans, and annelids



​Worms are annelids, they don't have a backbone, and have many segments, no legs, and have been on land Earth about 500 million years. Worms started their existence in the ocean, the polychaetes are sea worms.


Sea Scorpions might have been the first creatures to leave the ocean and adapt to land about 500 million years ago.
​

Eurypterid scorpions, they had chitin as a protein.

Ancient crustaceans, sanctacaris, seem to be related to scorpions and then much later, spiders.



​About 420 million years ago during the Devonian period we see land dwelling millipedes, they are some of the first land dwelling creatures along with centipedes, pillbugs/ rollie pollies (the only land dwelling crustaceans), and scorpions.
​

380 million years ago


​Ants are part of the order hymenoptera and are thought to have evolved about 210-160 million years ago before blooming plants, there are ants preserved in amber that are 190 million years old.


​At that time there were coniferous trees, the gymnosperms, which are wind pollinated. There were wasps before bees, though both are part of hymenoptera. 


Plants with flowers, the angiosperms, were first seen during the Cretaceous Period about 145 million years ago.

This is when bees, moths, and butterflies emerged, moths are seen in fossil records first, more butterflies are seen during the Eocene Period about 40 million years ago.  



animal Evolution



Cambrian explosion and Extinction 


​
​Cambrian Extinction was about 488 million years ago, there have been many mass extinctions

​Interesting Ancient creatures:

​Trilobites: survived about 4 mass extinctions:
​
  • Exclusively marine animals
  • First appeared at the beginning of the Cambrian Period, about 542 million years ago, when they dominated the seas.
  • Became less abundant in succeeding geologic periods, a few forms persisted into the Permian Period, which ended about 251 million years ago.

Trilobites used chitin as a protein, just like mushrooms, the shell was chitin and calcite
​

Picture
https://scitechdaily.com/in-earths-greatest-extinction-land-animals-began-dying-off-long-before-marine-life/

Ostracoderms: armoured, jawless, fishlikevertebrates that emerged during the early part of the Paleozoic Era (542–251 million years ago)


Late Cambrian times had eel-like jawless fish called the conodonts, and small mostly armoured fish known as ostracoderms
​
Picture

​https://www.britannica.com/animal/ostracoderm

​When plants got bigger and absorbed more Carbon Dioxide, there was an Ice Age

Devonian period was 419 million years ago (mya), there were Devonian Forests 360 mya
​
https://www.britannica.com/animal/Dimetrodon
Tiktaalik 

A 375-million-year old 
fossil. Tiktaalik roseae, better known as the "fishapod," is a 375 million year old fossil fish which was discovered in the Canadian Arctic in 2004.
​
Picture

​https://fossil.fandom.com/wiki/Tiktaalik
​
Bones that show the beginning of legs

Picture

https://evolutionnews.org/2008/07/tiktaalik_roseae_wheres_the_wr/

Picture

​During the permian period 298 million years ago, we see stem mammals:


​Dimetrodon is a stem mammal, they have teeth that look more like canines. 


Dinosaurs


​
Permian-Tirassic Extiction: 252 million years ago

​

Chicxulub crater after impact, 66 million years ago, the meteor is thought to have been over 9 miles wide

Picture

​https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2016/11/updated-drilling-dinosaur-killing-impact-crater-explains-buried-circular-hills


Mammal- Like Reptiles (stem mammals) learned to burrow and fill ecological niches



​Synapsids were transitional animals that began to behave more like mammals and survived the mass extinction that killed many large reptiles. 


Supercontinents



Land masses are part of tectonic plates that move and form different patterns, there was a time when animals could walk from modern day Australia to Canada without worrying about an ocean being in the way.

Picture
https://www.livescience.com/38218-facts-about-pangaea.html


Eocene



​Each Era has Periods and Epochs:

Picture

​https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Overview-of-geological-epochs-and-periods-in-the-Cenozoic-era-taken-from-the_fig3_273440356



Croc Ancestors


Picture

​https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Boverisuchus
​

today's Sea to Land transition



​The shores of the Earth have coral reefs:



The red areas are coral reef zones

Picture

​​https://www.researchgate.net/figure/Map-of-global-coral-reef-distribution-Coral-reefs-are-outlined-in-red-Source-UNEP-WCMC_fig1_248385521


Coral Reef ecosystems are at risk of being destroyed and many scientists are working to make things better


Another ecosystem seen along shores: Mangroves


Picture

https://www.britannica.com/story/amazing-mangroves


World map that shows where mangroves live:

Picture

​https://scienceworld.scholastic.com/issues/2018-19/100818/mapping-mangroves.html
​ 

Mangroves are torn down for agriculture and shrimp farming, when the mangrove forests are destroyed, there is more land erosion and destruction of property for people along the coast, there are people working on preservation and restoration of these vital ecosystems.
​

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11/7/2020

Early Life on Earth

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WHat is the oldest Species on the planet?



The Sea Sponge from Phylum Porifera

Picture

https://ramdigestivesystem.weebly.com/sponges.html


Another ANcient Creature is The Comb Jellie



​ctenophora
: Comb jellie, not quite a jellyfish: 
Ctenophora comprise a phylum of invertebrate animals that live in marine waters worldwide. They are notable for the groups of cilia they use for swimming, and they are the largest animals to swim with the help of cilia. 


​
Cnidaria: Cnidaria is a phylum containing over 10,000 species of animals found exclusively in aquatic environments: they are a predominantly marine species

Picture

http://www.mesa.edu.au/Cnidaria/default.asp



Jellyfish Biology:
 fertilized jellyfish eggs develop into larval planulae, they become polyps, bud into ephyrae and then transform into adult medusae.

Picture

https://ocean.si.edu/ocean-life/invertebrates/jellyfish-lifecycle-and-reproduction

Picture

https://www.seattleaquarium.org/blog/facts-jellyfish-life



​Coral Biology: Although many corals resemble plants, they are actually members of the animal phylum Cnidaria. Most corals are colonial, which means that each coral is made up of many individual polyps connected by living tissue (the coenosarc).

​

​
The first coral reefs date from the early Ordovician of about 500 million years ago, and their form at the time differed significantly from that of corals today, which, following, the mass extinction 240 million years ago at the end of the Permian period, first appeared in the middle of the Triassic period.

Anemone


Brachiopods



​Brachiopods are marine animals belonging to their own phylum, Brachiopoda, of the animal kingdom. Modern brachiopods occupy a variety of sea-bed habitats ranging from the Tropics to the cold waters of the Arctic and, especially, Antarctic.
​
  • have a very long history of life on Earth (at least 550 million years). They first appear as fossils in rocks of earliest Cambrian age
​
Picture
https://isgs.illinois.edu/outreach/geology-resources/brachiopods


Geologic Time Scale


Picture

​https://www.bgs.ac.uk/discovering-geology/fossils-and-geological-time/timechart/home.html



Today We get to see ancient fossils


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    Author: Jazmin Gannon

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