This is the shallow coastal area between the high-tide and low-tide marks, where organisms must adapt to being underwater and then exposed to air.
What is the intertidal zone?
These tiny drifting organisms include phytoplankton (which perform photosynthesis) and zooplankton; they form the base of most ocean food chains.
What is Plankton
Marine science includes this physical property of seawater that affects how dense it is and how things float or sink in the ocean.
What is salinity? (or density)
These cnidarians have two body forms—polyp (barrel-shaped with tentacles up) or medusa (umbrella-shaped bell with tentacles down).
What are jellyfish?
The open-water zone that includes both the neritic (over the continental shelf) and oceanic areas, away from the seafloor.
What is the pelagic zone?
This group of marine animals includes crabs, lobsters, and shrimp; most are in the class with gills for extracting oxygen from water and a hard exoskeleton.
What are crustaceans? (or arthropods)
A coastal ecosystem where freshwater rivers mix with salty ocean water, creating brackish conditions rich in nutrients.
What is an estuary?
These simple invertebrate animals (phylum Porifera) have many pores, no true tissues, and filter water for food.
What are sponges?
This layer of the ocean extends down to about 200 meters and is where most photosynthesis occurs.
What is the Sunlight Layer?
Many organisms in the midnight (bathypelagic) layer use this adaptation—producing their own light through chemical reactions—to find food or mates in total darkness.
What is bioluminescence?
These underwater “forests” of large brown algae provide habitat and food for many marine animals along rocky coasts.
What are kelp forests?
Most marine arthropods belong to this class; they have gills for breathing underwater and a hard exoskeleton.
What are crustaceans? (examples: crabs, lobsters, shrimp)
In the deep ocean, this layer has only a small amount of light and goes from about 200 to 1,000 meters.
What is the Twilight Layer
Coral reefs are built by these tiny animals that have a symbiotic relationship with algae for food and color.
What are coral polyps?
A diverse, colorful ecosystem built on calcium carbonate structures in warm, shallow tropical waters.
What is a coral reef?
Many sea creatures, especially in cold water, have this thick layer of fat for insulation, energy storage, and help with buoyancy.
What is blubber?
The deepest named layer in Apologia’s ocean division, also called the hadalpelagic, found in the ocean beyond 6,000 meters with extreme pressure.
What is the Trench Layer
This type of symbiotic relationship benefits both organisms, like the clownfish living safely among sea anemone tentacles.
What is mutualism?
Overfishing and this activity (removing too many fish) can disrupt ocean food webs and harm marine populations.
What is overharvesting?
Unlike most fish, sharks must keep swimming or they will sink because they do not have this gas-filled organ that many bony fish use for buoyancy.
What is a swim bladder?