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Ocean
Water: Optics
Most
of the organisms in the ocean depend on sunlight. Plants and bacteria,
such as kelp, seagrass and photosynthetic plankton, use light to make
energy through a process called photosynthesis. These are then eaten
by larger animals, which are in turn eaten by larger animals and so
on. Remember the food chain?
Sunlight is the basis (beginning) for this food chain. Sunlight also
warms the ocean's surface. This is important because it makes the water
warm enough for animals to live in it, and it is a driving force for
some currents.
As sunlight enters the ocean, it starts to be absorbed.
The ocean can be broken down into three vertical zones based on how
much light it receives.
The first zone, or euphotic zone, extends from the water's surface to
about 50 meters depth, depending on the time of year, the time of day,
the clarity (clearness)
of the water and the presence of clouds. This is the part of the water
column where there is still enough light for plants to photosynthesize.
All plankton, kelp forests and seagrass beds are found in the euphotic
zone.
The next zone is the dysphotic zone, which extends from about 50 meters,
or wherever the euphotic zone ends, to about 1,000 meters. In this
zone, there is enough light for organisms to see, but it is too weak
for photosynthesis to happen. If we were to venture into the dysphotic
zone, we could watch the visible light disappear as we travelled deeper.
Once we reached the aphotic zone, there would be no light. This zone
extends from about 1,000 meters depth to the ocean bottom. Animals in
this zone are rare, but they do exist. Think about the thriving hydrothermal
vent communities, which live and prosper without sunlight.
Some animals in the aphotic zone create their own light. This is called
bioluminescence.
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