Threats
Animals
Ocean zones
Producers and food web
Abiotic factors
100

 Plastic waste in the ocean harms animals in this way.

Pollution

100

This fish is famous for living among sea anemones.

 Clownfish

100

his ocean zone is affected by tides and is found along the shore.

 intertidal zone

100

These tiny organisms produce most of the ocean’s oxygen.

phytoplankton

100

This factor refers to how salty ocean water is.

 salinity

200

 Catching too many fish leads to this problem.

Overfishing

200

This marine mammal is the largest animal to ever live on Earth.

Blue whale

200

This ocean zone is shallow, warm, and full of life near coastlines.

neritic zone

200

Organisms that make their own food using sunlight are called this.

producers

200

This increases as ocean depth increases.

 pressure

300

Rising ocean temperatures cause coral to do this.

Bleach

300

This animal has eight arms and is highly intelligent.

Octopus

300

This is the largest ocean zone, far from land.

 open ocean

300

This is the first level of every ocean food chain.

 producers

300

This factor controls where photosynthesis can happen in the ocean.

sunlight

400

 Protected ocean areas are called this.

Marine reserves

400

These animals breathe air but live in the ocean.

marine mammals

400

This zone receives sunlight and supports photosynthesis.

photic zone

400

 Sharks are examples of this level in the food web.

Top predators

400

Warm and cold ocean currents affect this worldwide.

climate

500

 Choosing seafood caught responsibly helps ocean biomes in this way.

Sustainability

500

This deep‑sea adaptation allows animals to produce their own light.

bioluminescence

500

This deep ocean zone has no sunlight at all.

aphotic zone

500

This process is used by deep‑sea organisms near vents to make food.

chemosynthesis

500

This refers to how warm or cold ocean water is.

temperature