DK Pocket Genius - Ocean
DK Pocket Genius - Ocean
DK Pocket Genius - Ocean
OCEAN
DK LONDON
Senior Editor Ankita Awasthi Tröger
Senior Art Editor Laura Gardner Design Studio Ltd
Project Editors Bharti Bedi,
Ben Ffrancon Davies, Priyanka Kharbanda
US Editor Megan Douglass
Managing Editor Christine Stroyan
Managing Art Editor Anna Hall
Senior Production Editor Andy Hilliard
Production Controller Samantha Cross
Jacket Design Development Manager Sophia MTT
Publisher Andrew Macintyre
Associate Publishing Director Liz Wheeler
Art Director Karen Self
Publishing Director Jonathan Metcalf
A world of water
Earth is a blue, watery world, with seawater covering more than
two-thirds of its surface. Most of this seawater is contained
in five vast oceans. Beneath the waves, these oceans teem
with life. The ocean environment is vital to our survival on land,
yet it remains a mysterious and largely unexplored place.
Chemical soup
Life on Earth probably began around
hydrothermal vents deep on the ocean
floor. These vents spew boiling hot water
containing dissolved chemicals and minerals
that are essential building blocks for life.
Varied habitats
Oceans and seas make up the
largest environment for life on Earth.
There are many habitats within this
environment, and a vast variety of
animal and plant life.
A WORLD OF WATER | 5
Wild surface
The world’s oceans are
closely linked to our weather
and climate, and therefore
have a significant impact on
life on land. In turn, human
activity on land affects the
health of the oceans.
The Pacific
Ocean
Covering more than a
third of the Earth’s surface,
the Pacific is the world’s largest
ocean. It is also the deepest and
contains the Mariana Trench—the
world’s deepest place. Many island
chains are found in the Pacific,
including the islands of Hawaii.
The Atlantic
Ocean
Around half the size
of the Pacific, the Atlantic
is the world’s second-largest ocean.
It separates the continents of
Europe and Africa from North
and South America.
Arctic icebergs
Comets
Much of Earth’s ocean water came from
rainclouds in its atmosphere. More water
came from ice-carrying comets that melted
as they crashed down onto the planet.
Rising molten rock Ocean floor forms
Panthalassic Panthalassic
Early oceans Ocean Ocean
The first ocean covered
the globe and no land Global
was visible above its Ocean
surface. Most of the land
4–2.5 billion 541–485 million 359–299 million
emerged as lighter, less years ago years ago years ago
dense, continental rock Tethys
rose to the surface. This Ocean Atlantic
land and the ocean South Ocean
Atlantic
around it evolved over
Ocean
3.8 billion years.
201–145 million 66–23 million Present
years ago years ago day
Fossil of an
Marine life ichthyosaur
Around 3.5 billion years ago, life began
as simple organisms in the deep ocean.
Over time, more complex life evolved—including
giant marine reptiles such as ichthyosaurs, which
rivaled the land-dwelling dinosaurs in size.
10 | OCEAN
Ocean topography
The seafloor is not a flat, featureless place. Beneath the waves
is a vast landscape that rivals anything seen on land. There are
towering volcanoes and mountain ranges thousands of miles
long. Stretching out below them are hills, plains, and trenches.
Submerged seamount
Model showing a
section of the seafloor
OCEAN TOPOGRAPHY | 11
The average
Abyssal plains depth of the Seamounts
Abyssal plains are flat, Pacific ocean and volcanic
muddy areas of the floor is 14,050 ft
(4,280 m).
islands
seafloor. The mud is Seamounts are
made up of soft, settled 36,201 ft underwater mountains
clay or silt mixed with Mariana (11,034 m)
created mainly by extinct
the waste and remains Trench volcanoes. Some
of organisms. seamounts rise above
the surface to create
Oceanic volcanic islands, such as
trenches Hawaii’s Mauna Kea.
Caused by tectonic
activity, oceanic trenches
are deep gashes in the
seafloor. The deepest
trench—Mariana—
extends to more than
36,000 ft (11,000 m)
below the water’s surface.
12 | OCEAN
Oceanic winds
and storms
When the sun shines on the Earth’s atmosphere, it heats up the
air. As this warm air floats upward, cold air rushes in to replace
it. This creates wind. Oceanic winds whip up waves, move water
around in currents, and create storms.
Hurricanes
Circulating storm clouds forming
over tropical oceans can cause Climate change is
highly destructive storms that also contributing to
bring devastating winds and rain. more cyclones. The
These are known as hurricanes more heat there is in
in the northeast Pacific or north the sea, the more
Atlantic, cyclones in the South likely a cyclone
is to occur.
Satellite image of Hurricane Pacific and Indian oceans, and
Matthew over Haiti typhoons in the northwest Pacific.
Direction of
Storm clouds
the Earth’s Oceanic winds move in a
spin predictable direction unless
they encounter local weather
Winds
veering to systems. These systems are
the right caused by warm, moist air
rising from the ocean or sea.
This air carries water vapor,
which creates heavy rain
and circulating storm clouds.
Storm surges
Hurricanes can make
the sea rise up and
form a large wave of
water called a storm
surge. When this reaches
land, it can cause
catastrophic flooding.
Ocean currents
Winds push on the ocean surface, creating surface currents whose
direction is also affected by the Earth’s rotation. At the same time,
deep in the ocean, unaffected by the wind, there are much slower
currents that are driven by changes in the seawater’s temperature.
Surface currents
As the Earth rotates, wind blowing between
the equator and the poles gets deflected.
This sets the ocean’s surface currents
spinning in circles called gyres—clockwise
in the north and counterclockwise in the
south. Each gyre has a calm center—such
as the weed-choked Sargasso Sea in the
North Atlantic. Free floating seaweed in the Sargasso Sea
Ocean currents
across the world
North
North
Pacific gyre
Atlantic
gyre
South South
Pacific Atlantic Indian
gyre gyre Ocean
gyre
Warm ocean
currents Cold ocean currents
OCEAN CURRENTS | 17
Movement of water
In parts of the ocean, water rises up
to the surface from the deep. These
upwellings are common near coastlines:
water pushed away from the shore by
wind gets replaced by nutrient-rich
water drawn up from the ocean bottom,
nourishing blooms of plankton. The
movement of surface water to deeper
Phytoplankton bloom in the Barents Sea levels is called downwelling.
Ocean water
Seawater tastes salty because it contains a lot of salt called sodium
chloride, mixed with smaller amounts of other chemicals. It is made
up of about 96.5 percent water and 3.5 percent salty chemicals.
Oceans turned salty when they were formed billions of years ago,
as these chemicals washed into them from the land.
Changing states
Warm liquid water that evaporates
changes into a gas called water
vapor, which mixes with the air.
Freshwater freezes to form solid ice
at 32°F (0°C), but seawater freezes
only at 28.58°F (-1.9°C). Ice, being
less dense than water, floats in it.
Salty water
Water streaming across the land to the sea
collects minerals, known as salts. Most of
this salt is sodium chloride, which we
consume as table salt. This is what
makes ocean water undrinkable.
Oxygen in water
One molecule of water is
made up of two atoms of
hydrogen (H) and one
atom of oxygen (O).
Animals that breathe
underwater use
oxygen that is
dissolved in the
water. Oxygen levels
are highest near
the surface.
Scientists say coral
reefs can regrow after
appearing to be dead,
but only if the water
returns to its normal
temperature.
20 | OCEAN
Ocean environments
The oceans are made up of four main environments: seashores
and the coast, shallow seas, polar waters, and the open ocean.
Most ocean creatures live in the shallow seas, but life exists even
in deep-sea trenches 7 miles (11 km) below the surface. This is
why the ocean is the largest habitat for life on Earth.
Shallow seas
Shallow seas on the continental shelves
usually reach no deeper than 655 ft
(200 m). Life—including algae, plants,
and animals—is abundant here, powered
by the sun and nourished by nutrients
washed in from land. This habitat has
the greatest variety of ocean life.
Seashores
The seashore can be a tough place for
ocean life because it is regularly covered
and uncovered by the tides. Crashing
waves also cause constant erosion,
carving out new formations, such
as sea stacks, cliffs, and caves.
OCEAN ENVIRONMENTS | 21
Polar waters
Covered by thick ice
during the long winter
months, the Southern
and Arctic oceans make
up the world’s polar
waters. Despite their
freezing temperatures,
these oceans are home
to a surprising variety
of life.
Early life
Life began as single cells
in the oceans more than
3.5 billion years ago. These
evolved into organisms
that had more complex
multicelled bodies—
including animals such
as jellyfish and worms—
billions of years later.
Brachiopod
fossil from 300 Fossil remains of life forms
million years ago from 2 billion years ago
Early fish
The first vertebrates
(animals with spines) were
jawless fish, appearing
more than 500 million
years ago (mya). They
evolved into fish with
biting jaws, which came
to dominate the oceans
and included some of the
first big ocean predators. Fossil of the jawless Cephalaspis lyelli
HISTORY OF OCEAN LIFE | 23
Giant reptiles
Life evolving on land included the dinosaurs
during the Age of the Reptiles, between 250
and 66 mya. Many reptiles returned to the
ocean to evolve into swimming giant reptiles, Plesiosaurus
such as the Plesiosaurus. skeleton
Mass extinction
There have been five mass
extinctions on Earth. Some
of these events destroyed The mass extinction
most species of creature of 66 mya wiped out
that lived in the oceans the dinosaurs, along
of the past. The last with 70 percent of
extinction was around all species on
66 mya that wiped out the planet.
Ammonite fossil the giant marine reptiles.
Modern
ocean life
In the last 50 million Megalodon
years, swimming
mammals, such as
whales, evolved from
land-living ancestors.
And some prehistoric
sharks, such as the
megalodon, became
giants to prey on them.
Great white shark
24 | OCEAN
Fishing
Whaling
HUMANS AND THE OCEANS | 25
Pollution
Sewage, plastics, oil spills,
and chemical run-offs are
all poisoning the oceans.
However, some countries
are now enacting laws to
reduce or prevent these
forms of pollution. Oil can kill or harm creatures Plastic can choke seabirds
Destruction of habitats
Climate change, overfishing, and pollution
are putting many marine habitats under
severe stress. Some of these habitats are
so degraded that their native animal
species can no longer live there.
Urbanization of coastlines
As the global population increases, so does coastal
development, leading to the destruction of many
marine habitats in coastal waters. Some countries
are now taking steps to protect these areas.
COASTAL CRABS
Brightly colored coastal
scavengers, Sally Lightfoot
crabs are a common
sight on the shores of the
Galápagos Islands and
South and Central America.
28 | SEASHORES AND THE COAST
The coast
Coastlines take many different forms—from rocky shores and
soft beaches to cliffs, caves, and arches. Between the land
and the sea, this is a constantly changing environment.
Wave power
Waves pounding the shores grind
away at the bases of coastal cliffs
and erode them over time. Eventually,
the rock at the bottom of the cliff
cannot support the weight above
it, causing it to collapse.
Stone to sand
Stones and rocks swept into the water
are tossed around by the waves. Over time,
the sharp edges are ground away, forming
cobbles, pebbles, and sand.
30 | SEASHORES AND THE COAST
Rocky shores
Most of the life on a rocky shore is adapted to surviving under
water, but where the oceans meet the land, resident animals
and seaweed must tolerate being left high and dry at each
low tide. Those living on the most exposed shores must
also withstand powerful, crashing waves.
Most seashore
animals, such as
Many seaweed starfish, can only
species need to feed, breathe, and
stay submerged. reproduce when
under water.
Tides
Caused by the moon’s gravity, the tide
makes the water rise and fall along the
coast every day. At high tide, the shore
is completely submerged by seawater.
At low tide, the water goes back, leaving
the shore dry. The creatures left behind
are adapted to living briefly on land.
ROCKY SHORES | 31
Tidal pools
Tidal pools keep their water even at low
tide. Larger pools contain the richest
collections of life, because smaller pools
can dry out or overheat in the sun.
A slimy coating
Tidal pools helps protect
Mussels are keep seaweeds seaweeds that are
tethered to rocks and shrimp exposed to the air.
by special threads, submerged,
and only feed at even at low tide.
high tide.
32 | SEASHORES AND THE COAST
Grunt sculpin
Rhamphocottus richardsonii
▲ When submerged, it
extends its tentacles to
paralyze and pull its prey
into its mouth.
ROCKY SHORE LIFE | 33
Rock gunnel
Pholis gunnellus
Often mistaken for an eel, this
flat, elongated fish is very slippery,
allowing it to easily slip away
from predators. Females
lay their eggs in shells
and crevices.
RANGE North
Atlantic Ocean
SIZE 10 in (25 cm)
GROUP
Mail-cheeked fish
34 | SEASHORES AND THE COAST
Soft shores
Over time, solid rock gets weathered, or worn away, by waves,
wind, and rain into particles of stones and sand. This sediment
is then eroded, or washed away, and settles elsewhere as soft
shores, such as sandy beaches and mudflats. A lot of life is
buried beneath the surface in these places.
Beaches
Some beaches are made up of sand, but Estuaries
others—called shingle beaches—have Estuaries are bodies of water
bigger lumps of rock called pebbles and usually found at the ends of
cobbles. All these particles are moved rivers, where freshwater mixes
about by waves and tides, so beaches with salty seawater. Sediment
are constantly reshaped over time. washed downriver often builds
up into extensive mudflats
along the banks of estuaries.
Beds of shellfish are common
in estuaries, as are small fish,
shrimp, and crabs.
Mudskippers
Mudflats are alive with
creatures such as mud
skippers that burrow beneath
the wet mud. Mudskippers
are fish that not only swim
but can also climb, walk,
and skip on land. Spotted mudskipper
Mudflats
The tiniest particles of sediment,
mixed with bits of dead matter,
settle as mud to form mudflats.
Mud is sticky and is a better
environment for rooting plants
and burrowing animals than
shifting sand.
Pollution threatens
estuary habitats, and
may have caused a
20 percent drop in
estuary-dependent
fish in just 20 years.
Tidal mudflats in
South Island, New Zealand
36 | SEASHORES AND THE COAST
Mole crab
Emerita talpoida
The mole crab is named for the way it can reverse
into its burrow, like a mole. This leaves the antennae
on its head sticking out of the sand. It uses them to
sense and catch prey on the beach.
Burrowing foot
RANGE Northeastern
Pacific Ocean
SIZE 7 in (18 cm)
GROUP Bivalve mollusks
6 mph
(10 km/h)
while scuttling sideways
across the sand.
GHOST CRAB
Resting in its beach burrow by day, the ghost
crab emerges at night to hunt. Its name comes
from its pale, sandy color, which allows it to blend
into the beaches and dunes until it starts moving.
The ghost crab defends its burrow by making loud
rasping sounds with its claws and stomach.
40 | SEASHORES AND THE COAST
Salt marshes
Salt marshes are often
made up of winding
creeks and muddy pools.
At high tide, these fill
up with water, while
at low tide the plants
are left exposed.
Salt-tolerant plants
Glasswort is a hardy
species of flowering
halophyte—plants that
are adapted to and
thrive in saltwater.
SALT MARSHES AND MANGROVES | 41
Mangroves
Mangroves are salt-tolerant trees that are
specially adapted to growing in the airless
tidal mud. Many grow their roots above the
soil where they can absorb oxygen from the air.
A unique habitat
Mangrove forests provide a
unique habitat for a variety
of creatures, both big and
small. One such creature is
the archerfish, which hunts
by squirting water at prey
resting on leaves.
42 | SEASHORES AND THE COAST
Cape gannet
Morus capensis
FOCUS ON … The Cape gannet can plunge into the ocean to depths
FEEDING of 65 ft (20 m) to catch fish. Although it is a graceful flier,
Shorebirds feed by wading the gannet is famous for its clumsy-looking takeoffs.
and digging with their beaks.
Seabirds dive for their dinner.
RANGE Western and southern Africa
SIZE 351/2 in (90 cm)
GROUP Cormorants and relatives
Atlantic puffin
Fratercula arctica
The most colorful
seabird of the North
Atlantic, the puffin has Bright
strong wings that help it beak Small, stubby
skim over the ocean and wings help
scan for food. It brings with swimming
back whole fish to its
coastal nest.
Blue-footed booby
Sula nebouxii
The blue-footed
booby is a plunge-diver
that usually feeds in
flocks. When the birds
see a shoal of fish, they
dive down into the water
together to catch them.
Roseate spoonbill
Platalea ajaja
Brown pelican
Pelecanus occidentalis
While most pelicans fish at
the surface of the water, the
brown pelican plunge-dives
into the water from great
heights, mainly taking Pacific
anchovies and sardines.
Schools of fish
Fish gather together in large groups called shoals that help
them avoid predators. When these groups swim in unison in
the same direction, they are called schools. These schools
work like a single creature, helping the fish catch smaller
creatures and evade capture by larger predators.
Bluestripe snapper
Lutjanus kasmira
FOCUS ON … It is easy to recognize the bluestripe snapper from
SARDINE RUN its bright yellow color and the four electric-blue
Every year, billions of sardines stripes running down its sides. A resident of coral
migrate to spawn along reefs and lagoons, this fish schools together around
Africa’s southeast coastline. the sandy seabed.
Yellowback fusilier
Caesio xanthonota
Shoals of yellowback
fusiliers often have other
fish species mixed in with
them. Mainly yellow, the
fusilier changes to a red
and green color while
resting at night.
TROPICAL STARFISH
The Panamic cushion
star lives in seagrass
beds around the
Pacific coastlines of
Costa Rica and the
Galápagos Islands.
50 | SHALLOW SEAS
Shallow seas
The world’s shallow seas lap the edges of the continents and
lie above underwater shelves that extend out from the shore
before giving way to the deeper open ocean. This is a habitat
for several species, and light may penetrate right to the sea
bottom, especially if the water is not clouded by sediment.
Continental shelf
Continental shelves
Continental Continental shelves can range
slope Open ocean
from 19 miles (30 km) wide to over
bottom
620 miles (1,000 km) wide before
dropping down along continental
slopes to the open ocean bottom.
But nowhere are they deeper than
655 ft (200 m).
Rocky seabeds
In some places on the continental
shelves, rocky reefs form on the bedrock
of the seabed. These habitats are full of
nooks and crannies for many different
communities of marine life.
Sandy seabeds
Sand created by coastal erosion makes
up part of the sediment that covers
continental shelf seabeds. This sand
is full of burrowing creatures.
SHALLOW SEAS | 51
Ocean productivity
The waters of shallow seas are
fertilized by nutrients running
off from land and coming from
decaying waste and dead
matter. This, combined with
energy from the sun, make
coastal waters more productive
than the open ocean.
FOCUS ON …
SEA OTTERS
Sea otters are important
inhabitants of kelp forests.
They eat purple sea urchins, ▲ Sea otters rest by wrapping ▲ After resting, they dive down
which are harmful to these themselves in kelp and floating to collect purple sea urchins,
seaweed forests. on the surface. which they eat at the surface.
Senorita fish
Oxyjulis californica
Mollusks
FOCUS ON … There are more than 90,000 mollusk
FOOD species, which include octopuses,
Mollusks are a large, varied
group and each species has
oysters, squid, and sea snails. Most
its own way of catching and mollusks have a head, a shell, a soft
consuming food. Many feed
using a tonguelike structure body, and a muscular foot.
called a radula.
▲ Sedimentary bivalves,
such as this giant clam, filter
food from the water with
their gills.
MOLLUSKS | 57
When it is young, the queen scallop A striking blue, green, or brown color
shoots out fine threads from its foot onto when its shell is open, this clam lives
a nearby rock and stays attached until on sandy seabeds and coral reefs, but
adulthood, when it releases itself needs well-lit areas due to its symbiotic
and swims freely. relationship with photosynthetic algae.
change color
in a fraction of a second—for
camouflage, to scare away
predators, or to attract mates.
CUTTLEFISH
The male Australian giant cuttlefish is famous for the
brilliant color changes of his elaborate courtship
display. After mating, he protects the female from
the rivals gathering around them as she settles
beneath his outstretched arms and lays her eggs
among the rocks and plants of the seabed.
60 | SHALLOW SEAS
Dark arms
with white
suckers
62 | SHALLOW SEAS
Crustaceans
Many marine invertebrates (animals without backbones) are
arthropods. Most arthropods have jointed legs, segmented
bodies, and hard exoskeletons. On land, arthropods are usually
insects, but in the ocean most are hard-shelled crustaceans,
such as shrimp, crabs, and lobsters.
Ripper claw
used to cut
Echinoderms
Sea cucumbers, sea urchins, starfish, and feather stars are
some of the creatures that live along the bottom of shallow
seas. They belong to a group of animals called echinoderms,
many of whom are shaped like five-pointed stars, have a
mouth in the middle, and can regenerate limbs.
◀ Cells at
the point
of the break
start growing
to create a
new body.
◀ Over time,
the cells build
enough tissue
that the limb
grows into a
new starfish.
ECHINODERMS | 65
RANGE Western
Pacific Ocean
SIZE 16 in (40 cm)
arm span
GROUP Echinoderms
Great barracuda
Sphyraena barracuda
Distinctive silver,
shining scales
Formidable predators,
barracudas are fast
movers with a top
speed of 36 mph
(58 km/h).
Back dorsal
fin for
acceleration
FISH IN SHALLOW SEAS | 67
Red gurnard
Chelidonichthys cuculus
A bottom-dwelling fish that lives on sandy LOCATION Northeastern
and rocky seabeds, the red gurnard has a Atlantic Ocean, Mediterranean Sea
spiny fin that acts like a finger to find food. SIZE 28 in (70 cm)
GROUP Mail-cheeked fish
Spiny
food-finding
fin
68 | SHALLOW SEAS
Bull shark
Carcharhinus leucas
The bull shark is an aggressive
hunter that sometimes also
attacks humans. One of the few
shark species that can swim
in both fresh- and saltwater,
it favors murky waters where
it can stay hidden.
RANGE Caribbean
SIZE 26 in (65 cm)
GROUP Skates and rays
Tiger shark
Galeocerdo cuvier
A voracious killer, the tiger
shark is known to fatally attack
Sharp, serrated
humans. Known as the “trash teeth for tearing
can of the sea,” it eats almost through prey
anything it sees—tires and
license plates have been
among the unusual things
found in the stomachs of
tiger sharks.
the largest
living structure
on Earth. It can even be
seen from space.
GREAT BARRIER REEF
Coral reefs, such as the Great Barrier Reef,
are complex, rainbow-colored habitats that
teem with many thousands of different creatures.
Fish, lobsters, clams, seahorses, and sea turtles
are just a few of the resident marine species
that rely on coral reefs for their survival.
72 | SHALLOW SEAS
Coral reefs
Coral reefs are vast, colorful ecosystems found in clear, shallow
tropical waters. Built from the skeletons of coral polyps, the
reefs are rocky ridges that support the greatest variety of life in
the oceans. These “rainforests of the seas” are at risk, however.
What is coral?
Coral is a colony of thousands of
soft animals, called polyps, with
tentacles for catching planktonic
food. The polyps produce a stony
outer skeleton that builds up under
them as a solid rocky foundation,
which becomes the coral reef.
Atolls are reefs around Fringing reefs grow Barrier reefs are separated
volcanic islands close to the coast from the coast by a channel
CORAL REEFS | 73
Corals at risk
The polyps of many kinds of corals contain tiny
algae called zooxanthellae. As well as giving some
corals color, these algae help nourish them by
photosynthesizing in sunlight. However, global
warming is threatening this symbiotic partnership.
Overfishing: Overfishing can
Warming water: end up reducing the numbers
Warming water makes polyps spit out of algae-eating animals. This
their zooxanthellae. This bleaches the allows algae to grow unchecked
coral white (below) and starves it of and smother the reef.
food, and can eventually make it die.
◀ The
zooxanthellae in
the water have
tails that help
them swim.
◀ The
zooxanthellae
inside the polyp
are tailless and
do not swim.
CORAL REEF LIFE | 75
The miniature
pygmy seahorse
wraps its tail
around soft
coral and
Fins to help stretches out to
with propulsion
suck tiny plankton
The reef squid can propel itself from the water
6 ft 7 in (2 m) out of the water and around it.
fly for 32 ft 10 in (10 m) through
the air before reentry.
RANGE Tropical
RANGE Tropical western Atlantic western Pacific Ocean
Ocean, Caribbean SIZE 1 in (2.5 cm)
SIZE 16 in (40 cm) GROUP Pipefish and
GROUP Cephalopod mollusks seahorses
Day octopus
Octopus cyanea
The Mandarin fish may look bright There are around 115 species of
and beautiful, but it is covered in a thick, butterfly fish. This copperband butterfly
bad-smelling mucus that helps deter fish has a false eye spot, which
predators. The fish hunts crustaceans may help distract
and invertebrates on the seafloor. predators. Its
narrow, pointed
mouth helps it
RANGE
pluck food from
Tropical western
coral crevices.
Pacific Ocean
SIZE 3 in (7 cm)
GROUP
Dragonets
RANGE Eastern Indian
and western Pacific oceans
SIZE 8 in (20 cm)
GROUP Perches and relatives
Emperor angelfish
Pomacanthus imperator
GIANT JELLYFISH
The open ocean is the
domain of some of the
world’s largest jellyfish,
such as the lion’s mane,
which has tentacles up
to 120 ft (36.5 m) long.
80 | THE OPEN OCEAN
Ocean waters
On the surface, the open ocean is so vast that the occasional
island is often the only land in sight. Below the surface, the
water is divided into different depth zones. During the descent
to the deep, dark bottom, the temperatures plummet, the
pressure increases, and the light fades.
Open ocean: Most organisms of the open ocean Atolls: Coral reefs growing around
spend their entire lives swimming or floating in an island form a ring called an atoll,
mid-water—far away from the solid bottom lying separated from the central island
miles beneath them. peak by a calm lagoon.
OCEAN WATERS | 81
Sunlit zone:
Depth zones 0–655 ft
The ocean is made (0–200 m)
up of five different
depth zones: the
Twilight
sunlit zone, twilight zone: 655–
zone, midnight zone, 3,300 ft
abyssal zone, and (200–
hadal zone. The 1,000 m)
deepest places on
Earth are found in
the hadal zone.
Bioluminescent
fish
Deep-sea
fish
Abyssal zone:
13,100–19,700 ft
(4,000–6,000 m)
Hadal zone:
19,700–36,100 ft
(6,000–11,000 m)
Oceanic
crust
82 | THE OPEN OCEAN
Sargassum seaweed
Sargassum natans
Most seaweeds cannot survive in the open RANGE Western central Atlantic and
ocean because they grow while attached to western Indian oceans
rocks, but in the calm Sargasso Sea in the SIZE 26 ft 3 in (8 m)
North Atlantic, there are thick mats of
floating sargassum seaweed, which GROUP Brown seaweed
provide shelter for many animals.
THE SUNLIT ZONE | 83
Krill Protozoans
Krill are tiny, shrimplike creatures that The smallest member of the zooplankton
form vast swarms that are fed upon by group, protozoans are single-celled, like
fish, birds, and mammals. Krill themselves algae. However, they feed on microscopic
feed on phytoplankton. living things in the water, rather than
making food by photosynthesis.
RANGE Oceans
worldwide RANGE Oceans worldwide
SIZE 0.4–6 in (1–15 cm) SIZE Microscopic
GROUP Euphausid GROUP Protozoans
crustaceans
84 | THE OPEN OCEAN
Producers
Single-celled algae in the plankton
(phytoplankton) are the
producers of the open ocean
food chain. This is because
they use the sun’s energy
to produce sugar and other
food by photosynthesis.
Cyano
bacteria
Primary
consumers
Scientists have Tiny creatures that
found that human- cannot make
created microplastics their own food feed
have spread through the on phytoplankton.
deep ocean and These creatures
entered the include zooplankton
food chain. and the larval stages
of some fish. K ril l
THE FOOD CHAIN | 85
Secondary consumers
The smallest carnivores make up the
third level of the food chain. They
feed on the primary consumers that
have already digested their food
of phytoplankton.
na
Tu
Tertiary consumers
Secondary consumers are prey
for larger hunters called tertiary
consumers. An example is tuna,
which is then eaten by shark.
Lantern fsh
Quaternary
consumers
The biggest, most powerful
predators are at the top of
the food chain. Each top
predator needs a large
expanse of habitat to supply
Gre the food that it needs.
at white shark
86 | THE OPEN OCEAN
Jellyfish
Jellyfish are not fish at all, but soft, jellylike creatures called
cnidarians that do not have a heart, brain, bones, or blood.
Most jellyfish are armed with long, stinging tentacles to stun
their prey and drag them into their mouths. Their umbrella-
shaped body pulsates to propel them up through the water.
RANGE Indian
RANGE and western
Oceans Pacific oceans,
worldwide Red Sea
SIZE 12 in SIZE 51/2 in
(30 cm) diameter (14 cm) diameter
GROUP GROUP
Cnidarians Cnidarians
RANGE Northeastern
RANGE Atlantic and Atlantic Ocean,
Pacific oceans, Mediterranean Sea
Mediterranean Sea SIZE 35 in (90 cm)
SIZE 3 in (7 cm) diameter diameter
GROUP Cnidarians GROUP Cnidarians
88 | THE OPEN OCEAN
Predators
The ocean is full of powerful predators that spend their lives
prowling the waters hunting for prey. These predators have
streamlined bodies and strong muscles that are ideal for fast
bursts of attacking speed. They are armed with sharp teeth,
gripping tentacles, or slashing bills.
Orcas jump,
or breach, out
of the water
perhaps to play or
communicate.
PREDATORS | 89
Marlin
Makaira nigricans
Swordlike bill
19 mph
(30 km/h),
sailfish are among the fastest
fish in the ocean.
Cartilaginous fish
Cartilaginous fish have skeletons that are made of cartilage
rather than bone. The group includes chimeras that have
rabbitlike teeth for crunching hard shellfish; flat-bodied rays
that live on the bottom or swim in mid-water; and sharks that
are sharp-toothed predators or giant, cruising filter-feeders.
Pelagic stingray
Pteroplatytrygon violacea
Long,
venomous tail
CARTILAGINOUS FISHES | 95
Pacific spookfish
Rhinochimaera pacifica
The Pacific
spookfish has a
long, spear-shaped
snout with small sensory
pits that help in locating
prey. Once it detects prey,
the fish uses its sharp,
beaklike mouth to catch
and crush its victim.
Filter feeders
The largest fish in the world are not fearsome hunters but
gentle giants that filter seawater for food. Most of these slow-
moving animals use gill rakers that act like sieves, allowing
them to filter or strain plankton and small fish from massive
mouthfuls of seawater.
Megamouth shark
Megachasma pelagios
FOCUS ON …
GILL RAKERS
Manta rays and three shark
species use gill rakers to filter
food; baleen whales use
baleen plates to do this.
▲ The gill rakers are like RANGE Tropical and warm temperate oceans
the teeth on a comb, SIZE 18 ft (5.5 m)
straining seawater out GROUP Sharks
and leaving food behind.
FILTER FEEDERS | 97
Whale shark
Rhincodon typus
Cetaceans
Whales, porpoises, and dolphins all belong to a group of
aquatic mammals called cetaceans, known as much for their
often large size as for their intelligence and complex social
behavior. Of this group, whales are the largest creatures on
Earth and inhabit every one of its oceans.
Baleen
FOCUS ON … plate
DIFFERENCES Row of
There are two main groups conical teeth
of whales: baleen whales
(Mysticeti), which filter food ▲ The sperm whale (a toothed ▲ The Bryde’s whale (a
from water through bristlelike whale) eats using the 36–52 baleen whale) eats by pushing
baleen plates, and toothed cone-shaped teeth it has in seawater through the baleen
whales (Odontoceti). its lower jaw. plates in its mouth.
Striped dolphin
Stenella coeruleoalba
30 minutes.
These songs are considered the most complex
sound sequences of any animal on Earth.
SEA GIANTS
Growing to 55 ft 9 in (17 m) in length, humpback
whales have long heads, jaws covered in knob-like
projections, and widely-spaced white throat pleats.
These whales spend the summer in cold waters, before
migrating to warmer waters to give birth to their calves.
102 | THE OPEN OCEAN
Bryde’s whale
Balaenoptera edeni
RANGE North
Atlantic Ocean
SIZE 54 ft 2 in Broad, paddle-
(16.5 m) shaped flippers
GROUP
Baleen whales
CETACEANS 103
Humpback whale
Megaptera novaeangliae
Humpback whales are well known not RANGE Oceans worldwide
just for communicating with complex SIZE 55 ft 9 in (17 m)
songs (which can be heard underwater
from 20 miles/32 km away), but also GROUP Baleen whales
for their group behavior: they work
together to blow bubbles that scare
fish into denser shoals, making them
easier to swallow. Throat pleats
Depleted by 20th-
century whaling, whale
numbers are slowly
recovering, partly due
to the 1986 whaling
moratorium.
104 | THE OPEN OCEAN
Minke whale
Balaenoptera acutorostrata
The minke is the smallest of
the baleen whales, which have
flat, hanging baleen plates in
place of teeth. The minke
whale has a torpedo
shape for deep dives. RANGE Oceans worldwide
SIZE 28 ft 10 in (8.8 m)
GROUP Baleen whales
Fin whale
Balaenoptera physalus
The second-largest whale in the ocean,
the fin whale has a distinctive black or Fin whales
brownish gray color on its back and are nicknamed
sides, and white on its underside. “razorbacks” after the
distinct ridge behind
their dorsal fin.
Blue whale
Balaenoptera musculus
Large tail
called a fluke
Flippers for steering
Sei whale
Balaenoptera borealis
RANGE Oceans worldwide One of the world’s fastest whales,
SIZE 88 ft 7 in (27 m) sei whales have sleek, streamlined bodies
that can reach speeds of up to 34 mph
GROUP Baleen whales
(55 km/h) in short bursts. They usually
swim in groups of two to five,
except when migrating.
Ocean birds
FOCUS ON … Seabirds roam far over the open
FEEDING ocean while foraging for food or when
Seabirds have developed
several techniques for migrating. Some, such as albatrosses
catching food at sea. These
include skimming, plunging, and shearwaters, spend nearly their
diving, and even “swimming”
through the water.
whole lives out in the open ocean.
Arctic tern
Sterna paradisaea
Great shearwater
Ardenna gravis
Günther’s lantern
fish is a small
twilight-zone dweller
with a unique pattern
of light-emitting organs, RANGE Atlantic Ocean
called photophores, set SIZE 3 in (8 cm)
along its length. GROUP Lantern fish
Giant hatchetfish
Argyropelecus gigas
Black swallower
Chiasmodon niger
Sharp teeth
pointing backward
Hydrothermal vents
In some spots in the deep sea, volcanic activity under the ocean
floor heats water in the rocks to more than 752°F (400°C) and
makes it shoot up through holes called hydrothermal vents. This
hot water is rich in minerals, and microbes use them as a source
of energy to make food, which supports an entire food chain of
animals existing away from the energy of the sun.
ORCAS
Also known as killer whales,
these apex predators are
found in the polar oceans.
Highly social, orcas live in
complex family groups led
by breeding females.
116 | POLAR WATERS
Polar oceans
The polar oceans are affected by the seasons like nowhere else
on Earth. During the long winter months, the sun disappears
and the oceans freeze over. During the short summer months,
the ice melts, large icebergs break away, and there is an
explosion of new life.
Polar sunshine
Because of the Earth’s tilted axis,
the sun does not rise for long
Sun
during the polar winter. During the
Earth
polar summer, although the sun
shines almost permanently, it is
not enough to melt all of the ice.
Sea ice
Sea ice is frozen surface water that floats
on liquid water underneath. It includes fast
ice, which is attached to the land, and
pack ice, which drifts and is not attached.
Icebergs
Icebergs are chunks of freshwater ice
that have broken away from ice shelves
or glaciers and are floating in seawater.
They come in all shapes and sizes—
some are as small as an ice cube,
others as big as a country.
POLAR OCEANS | 117
Larsen C
Riiser-Larsen
Wilkins Ronne-Filchner
Amery
Fimbul
Ice
shelves
Ice shelves are
floating sheets
of ice attached to
a landmass. Most
ice shelves are
found off the coast Ross
of Antarctica (right). George VI
Plankton blooms
When nutrient-rich meltwater enters the
oceans in springtime, an explosion of
plankton occurs. This brings with it a
“bloom” visible from space, such as this
one in the Arctic Ocean’s Chukchi Sea.
Polar life
Large ice sheets on the fringes of the Arctic and Southern
oceans provide feeding, breeding, and birthing places for
seals, walruses, penguins, polar bears, and Arctic foxes.
Beneath the ice, a rich supply of algae, fish, and small
animals is available to the semiaquatic predators above.
The emperor penguin can dive to A solitary predator, this spotted seal
depths of 2,000 ft (600 m) and stay can use its teeth in two ways. When
underwater for up to 20 minutes. hunting larger prey, such as penguins
In winter, the males stand on the and seals, the teeth are good for biting.
ice to incubate their eggs. They can also be interlocked to strain
out krill from seawater.
RANGE Antarctica
SIZE 3 ft 9 in (1.15 m) RANGE Antarctica
GROUP Penguins SIZE 11 ft 2 in (3.4 m) long
GROUP Pinnipeds
POLAR LIFE | 119
Polar bear
Ursus maritimus
427 miles
(687 km)
in search of floating ice.
Greenland shark
Somniosus microcephalus
Greenland sharks
often have parasites
Unusually
attached to their
small dorsal fin eyes. This makes
them blind
over time.
POLAR LIFE | 123
Crabeater seal
Lobodon carcinophagus
RANGE Antarctica
SIZE 7 ft 7 in (2.3 m)
GROUP Pinnipeds
RECREATION
Oceans can be the
focus of leisure activities,
including sailing, surfing,
and snorkeling. Ocean
liners carry thousands of
people around the world.
126 | HUMANS AND THE OCEANS
Phoenician ships
The Phoenicians were
great ship builders and
traders of the ancient world.
From 2500 bce they set up
a vast maritime trading
network around the
Mediterranean Sea, and
were the leading seafaring
merchants of their time.
Illustration of a
Phoenician trading ship
The age of
exploration
From the 15th century, European
explorers sailed to different
parts of the world aboard great
ocean-going ships. In 1522,
Ferdinand Magellan began the
first circumnavigation of the
globe, but died en route,
leaving Juan Sebastián Elcano
to complete the expedition.
SAILING THE OCEANS | 127
Telescope
Oceanography
Navigation aids
The first sailors mapped the Oceanography is the
stars to find their way across science of the oceans, and
the oceans. Later, instruments includes everything from
such as sextants improved marine biology and seafloor
navigation by measuring the geology to oceanic storms
angles between the sun and and seawater composition.
Marine sextant the horizon. Oceanographers often
study shallow seabeds,
as shown below.
Steam power
The Industrial Revolution brought steam power to
modern ships. This enabled large Atlantic-crossing
liners to transport people from Europe to the
Americas in the 19th and 20th centuries.
Explorers
Most of the early ocean explorers had little interest in the waters
below their ships and boats. Instead, they were simply crossing
the seas in search of promising new lands and potential riches.
However, their journeys often led to the opening up of new sea
routes and an exploration of the oceans themselves.
Jacques Cousteau
Cousteau was a French ocean explorer who was
made famous by his television documentaries
about the undersea environment. He also
invented an early underwater breathing
apparatus, known today as scuba.
COUNTRY OF ORIGIN
France
DATES OF EXPLORATION
1942–97
KNOWN FOR Books
and documentaries
on ocean conservation
Deep-sea exploration
Exploration of the underwater world was fairly limited until the
invention of the diving suit, which enabled the wearer to stay
underwater for extended periods. Submarines now carry
people underwater, while submersibles—launched from
ships at the surface—take them to even greater depths.
Turtle submarine
Created in 1776 during the Vertical
American Revolution, the propeller
Turtle was a wooden,
one-person submarine.
It was designed to place
mines on the English
warships blockading
New York harbor.
Detachable mine
Lever to
steer rudder
DEPTH 13–16 ft
(4–5 m) Foot pedals
to power the
SPEED 3 mph propeller
(5 km/h)
MATERIAL Wood,
steel, tar
DEEP-SEA EXPLORATION | 131
DEPTH 2,950 ft
DEPTH 590 ft (180 m) (900 m)
SPEED Walking speed SPEED 1.4 mph
MATERIAL Copper, (2.25 km/h)
brass, canvas, rubber, MATERIAL
wool, leather Aluminum
Nautile submersible
Pressure-resistant Like other modern submersibles,
casing the Nautile can withstand the
pressures experienced at great
depths, including those at the
ocean bottom. It can carry three
people and is equipped with
cameras, lights, and robotic
arms to collect samples.
Modern ships
Humans use modern ships to transport cargo across seas and
between continents. Massive tankers and container ships take
the largest loads. But ships are not only about transporting
goods—ocean travel is also big business, with millions of
people vacationing aboard luxury cruise ships every year.
Cruise ship
Cruise ships are large, luxurious floating SIZE Up to 1,184 ft (360 m) long
hotels that carry passengers around CARRYING CAPACITY 6,680 guests
the world. The largest cruise ships,
such as the Symphony of the Seas, AVERAGE SPEED 25 mph (41 km/h)
have multiple pools, parks, and
restaurants alongside thousands
of cabins.
MODERN SHIPS | 133
Container ship
Enormous container ships
are used to transport heavy
loads between continents.
The cargo is loaded into
rectangular shipping
containers, which are then
lifted onto the ships.
There is a great
SIZE Up to environmental cost
400 m (1,300 ft) to shipping: large ships
long emit pollution and empty
CARRYING CAPACITY their waste into
21,413 containers clean seas.
AVERAGE SPEED
37 km/h (23 mph)
Oil tanker
Oil tankers are huge, ocean-going ships SIZE Up to 1,500 ft (458 m)
specifically designed for carrying crude oil, CARRYING CAPACITY Up to 4.2 million
which is used to make gasoline. The largest barrels of oil
tankers carry enough oil to fill over 16,500
tanker trucks on land. AVERAGE SPEED 23 mph (37 km/h)
134 | HUMANS AND THE OCEANS
Ocean recreation
The oceans are a great playground for people, both above and
below the waves. Every year, millions visit the oceans to swim,
snorkel, and scuba dive. Others enjoy skimming across the
surface on sailing boats and surfboards. Many of these ocean
activities, once done only for fun, are now considered sports.
Sailing
Sailing is an ancient
mode of travel that is
today enjoyed by many
people for recreation.
Craft vary in size, from
single-sail dinghies to
large, multi-crewed
ocean-going ships.
EQUIPMENT Ship
or boat, mast, sails,
rope, anchor
POPULAR IN Worldwide
DEPTH Surface
Snorkeling
Snorkeler holding his Snorkeling is an easy way
breath to dive below the of exploring shallow waters
surface for short periods
by wearing flippers, a face
mask, and a snorkel—a
long breathing tube that
sticks out above the surface
of the water. Snorkelers
breathe though the tube
as they swim face down
in the water.
3 million
shipwrecks, sunk
over thousands
of years.
REMAINS AT SEA
The Aida was an Egyptian ship that survived a
German air attack during World War II. However, in
1957 it crashed into rocks when it met heavy weather
while delivering supplies. The Aida remains where she
sank in the Red Sea, near Brothers Islands, Egypt.
138 | HUMANS AND THE OCEANS
Traditional methods
Many people still use traditional fishing LOCATION Shoreline
methods to catch enough fish for themselves TARGET FISH Coastal species
and their families. These commonly include
baited lines, hand spears, and simple nets EQUIPMENT Fishing lines, spears, nets
spread out in shallow, coastal waters.
Traditional fishing
tends to be more
sustainable: smaller
hauls mean enough
fish are left in the
oceans to breed.
FOOD FROM THE OCEANS | 139
Fish farms
Fish such as salmon, tuna,
and cod can be farmed for
food in large cages that are
submerged in shallow coastal
waters. The fish have to be
fed, just like any other animal
on a land farm.
Mast to
house drill
Deck crane
ENERGY | 141
Long, dam-like
barrage catching
the water’s energy
Oceans in peril
FOCUS ON … Human activities—such as overfishing
OVERFISHING and pollution—can badly harm the
Overfishing happens when
more fish are caught oceans and the organisms that live
than can be replaced by
breeding, resulting in there. Habitats can take years to recover,
declining numbers. and species can be driven to extinction.
Oil spills
Oil is carried around the world on container ships, but
▲ Nets used by fishing accidents can end up spilling this oil into the ocean. Oil
trawlers can cause damage floats on the surface and washes ashore, sticking to
to the seabed and reefs. animals that live there.
Warming oceans
Rising levels of carbon
dioxide in the atmosphere
are causing the global
warming of the oceans,
which also melts polar
ice, making sea levels
rise across the world.
Stopping pollution
Many conservation groups are trying to
stop harmful pollution flowing into the
oceans. Some countries have subsequently
adopted rules to prevent chemicals and
sewage being dumped into their rivers.
Marine reserves
Marine reserves are large areas of
ocean that are protected from human
interference. They are a safe haven for
endangered species and places where
animals targeted by fishing can breed Sewage plant for treating waste water
and recover. before dumping to prevent pollution
Protecting coasts
Coastal developments—such as
vacation resorts—destroy important
habitats such as mudflats and
mangrove forests. Some governments
are recognizing the harm these
developments cause and are taking
steps to reduce their numbers.
SAVING THE OCEANS | 145
Cleaning up
The regular cleaning up of
beaches helps prevent waste
from reentering the marine
environment. Many groups
organize beach cleaning days
for people willing to volunteer
their time.
Volunteers cleaning a beach
About 10 million
Sustainable fishing tons of bycatch
Fishing is sustainable when the catch is never (unintentional catch)
bigger than the number of babies produced is thrown back dead
when fish breed. Countries achieve this by into the ocean
having laws that set quotas, which are limits every year.
on the number of fish that can be caught.
They can also stop methods that harm
habitats, such as bottom trawling.
146 | OCEAN
Fascinating facts
MARINE LIFE every year. They also produce more than
half the oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere.
• To reach their maximum height of
around 98 ft (30 m) tall, giant kelp can • Most creatures that live on the deep
grow at speeds of 24 in (61 cm) per day. seafloor are scavengers that wait for pieces
of food to drift down from above. It can take
• Fish living in cold Antarctic waters have decades for a whole whale carcass to be
a natural antifreeze in their blood to keep devoured by these creatures.
it flowing and prevent it from freezing.
• Around 90 percent of life in the ocean
• Cleaner wrasses are small fish that lives in the shallows of the sunlit zone.
survive by feeding on parasites that
live on large fish. They even swim into • Penguins use their flippers to “fly”
the mouth of the larger fish to underwater at speeds of up to
feed on the parasites. 25 mph (40 km/h).
• Many fish can change The oldest ocean • Billions of creatures make
from male to female, or floor is thought to be the journey from their hiding
vice versa, during their more than 200 million place in the twilight and
lifetimes. Other fish have years old. midnight zones to feed in the
both male and female sunlit zone at night. They then
sex organs.
return to the deep by the day.
• The porcupine fish protects
• Green sea turtles can migrate for
itself by quickly taking on water if
more than 1,400 miles (2,250 km) across
threatened. The water makes the fish
swell to over twice its normal size— the ocean to lay their eggs. Some juveniles
usually too big for a predator to swallow. have been recorded traveling more than
5,600 miles (9,000 km) across the oceans.
• Parrotfish protect themselves while
sleeping by first excreting a mucus-like
substance from their mouths, which GEOGRAPHY
covers them like a cocoon.
• The name “Pacific Ocean” comes
• Approximately 50 billion tons of from the Latin Tepre Pacificum, meaning
phytoplankton grow in the sunlit zone “peaceful sea.”
FASCINATING FACTS | 147
• More than 90 percent of an iceberg • Cold water from the Arctic seas sinking
lies hidden, submerged beneath the to the ocean bottom creates the Denmark
surface of the water. Strait cataract, the largest waterfall on
Earth. It lies beneath the ocean, between
• The Gulf Stream is a current of warm Greenland and Iceland. At 11,500 ft
water in the Atlantic Ocean. It moves at (3,505 m) high, it is much taller than the
4 mph (6.4 km/h) and influences the climate Angel Falls in Venezuela, the highest
of places that border the ocean. waterfall on land.
148 | OCEAN
• There are five oceans in the world: • The oceans provide the largest habitat
the Pacific, Atlantic, Indian, Southern, for life on Earth; over 94 percent of
and Arctic. the world’s creatures are aquatic.
• Around 70 percent of the planet’s • The South China Sea is the biggest sea
surface is covered by oceans, which in the world. It covers an area of about
hold around 97 percent of all the water on 1 million sq miles (2.6 million sq km).
Earth. The other 3 per cent is freshwater:
2 percent stored in glaciers, ice caps, • The coldest temperature of any
and snowy mountain ranges, and 1 percent ocean on Earth, at 28.54°F (-1.92°C),
stored either in aquifers or bedrock (ground is under polar sea ice.
water) or in lakes, rivers, and streams
(surface water). • The shallow parts of the Persian Gulf
in the Indian Ocean have the warmest
• Sound travels 4.5 times faster surface temperature, at 96°F (35.6°C).
through seawater than through air.
• The Dead Sea, situated between Jordan
• The temperature in the deepest and Israel, is nearly ten times saltier than
ocean water is between 32°F and the ocean. This makes swimming in the sea
39°F (0°C and 4°C). feel more like floating.
• The heaviest boned ocean fish, the • The fastest fish in the world is the
ocean sunfish, or Mola mola, can weigh sailfish, which can reach speeds of up
up to 2 tons. Mola is Latin for “millstone”, to 19 mph (30 km/h).
which the fish is said to resemble due
to its rounded body, rough texture, and • The largest predatory fish in the world’s
gray color. ocean is the great white shark. It can grow
up to 20 ft (6 m) long and weigh up to
• The smallest ocean organisms are 1,700 lb (770 kg).
bacteria. There can be about
1 billion bacteria in 2 pints • The six-eyed spookfish is
(1 liter) of seawater. thought to be the fish with
Flying fish can the most eyes. Two large
• To date, just over 35,700 leap 2 m (6 ft) out of primary eyes point forward;
species of fish have been the water and fly for it has two other pairs of
recorded in the world. 100 m (328 ft) on their “accessory eyes” that help
About half live in the sea. outstretched fins. collect more light.
• There are more than one • Found in the Red Sea and
billion different types of Indo-Pacific region, the puffer
microbe in the ocean. fish is considered to be one of the
most poisonous fish in the world. Less
• Found in the Atlantic, the 21/2-in- (6.35-cm-) than 0.00014 oz (1–4 mg) of its neurotoxin
long hairy frogfish is covered in hairlike can be fatal to humans, and there is
skin extensions that look just like fur. currently no known antidote.
Alga (algae) A living Cartilaginous fish is part of the plankton. Exoskeleton The hard
thing that uses light A fish with a skeleton outer covering of some
energy to make food made from rubbery Crust The outer rocky invertebrates.
by photosynthesis. cartilage instead of layer of the Earth.
Many algae are hard bone, such as Extinct When every
microscopic and sharks and rays. Other Crustacean An member of a species
single-celled; others backboned animals invertebrate with jointed is dead.
are big seaweeds. have a bony skeleton. legs and a usually
hard, armor-like Fin A flattened part
Amphipod A shrimp- Cephalopod A mollusk exoskeleton, such as that sticks out from the
like crustacean with with long arms and shrimp and crabs. body of an underwater
seven pairs of limbs, tentacles, such as animal and helps with
such as sand hoppers. squid, octopuses, Decapod A crustacean swimming. A dorsal fin
and cuttlefish. with five pairs of limbs projects from the back
Antenna A long, thin (with front ones often of fish, whales, and
“feeler” found on Cetacean A swimming shaped as claws), such dolphins.
the head of some mammal with flippers as crabs and lobsters.
invertebrates. that spends all its life Fossil The remains
in water and breathes Echinoderm An or impression of a
Baleen whale A air through a blow- invertebrate with spiny once-living thing
whale that has hairy hole, including whales skin and a usually preserved in rocks.
strips called baleen and dolphins. star-shaped body,
instead of teeth, used such as sea urchins Gastropod A mollusk
to strain small animals Climate The average and starfish. with a large creeping
from the water. weather conditions of a foot, such as snails.
place over many years. Ecosystem Living
Bioluminescence Climate change due things and their Gill rakers The stiff,
The production of to global warming is physical environment. comblike edges of fish
light by living things. caused by humans gills, used to help strain
burning fossil fuels. Erosion When particles food from water.
Bivalve A mollusk that are worn away
with a hinged shell, Cnidarian An (weathered) from rock Glacier A large mass
such as scallops, invertebrate with get carried away, such of compressed ice
clams, and mussels. stinging tentacles, as by wind and rain. that moves downhill
including anemones, extremely slowly.
Camouflage A color, jellyfish, and corals. Estuary The tidal
pattern, or shape that mouth of a large river, Global warming An
some creatures use to Continental shelf Part where seawater meets increase in the Earth’s
hide themselves. of a continent that is freshwater. temperatures caused
submerged under by greenhouses gases
Carnivore An animal shallow seas around Euphausid A shrimp- trapping the sun’s
that eats only meat. the edge of the land. like crustacean, such warmth. Greenhouse
GLOSSARY | 151
gases include carbon Migration The regular, Polyp The body of a Sponge An
dioxide, produced by usually yearly, journey cnidarian attached to invertebrate with a
burning fossil fuels. of an animal to and the seabed at one end, simple, often shape-
from different places with extensible ten- less, body that feeds
Gyre The spiraling to feed and breed. tacles at the other end, by filtering food from
pattern of the ocean’s including anemones surrounding water.
surface currents. Mollusk An invertebrate and tiny coral polyps.
with a soft body. Most Stomatopod A
Habitat A place where mollusks, such as Predator An animal crustacean, such as
a living thing lives. snails, have hard shells; that hunts and eats a mantis shrimp, with
others, like octopuses, other animals (its prey). spear- or club-like
Hurricane A severe, lack a shell. front limbs used for
potentially destructive Protozoan A hunting prey.
tropical storm with Oceanography The microscopic, single-
winds that can reach study of the seas and celled living thing that Tide The regular rise
over 75 mph (120 km/h). the oceans. usually consumes food. and fall of the ocean’s
water caused by the
Hydrothermal vent An Pelagic Relating to the Radula A mollusk’s gravitational pull of
opening in the seafloor, open ocean. tongue, usually covered the moon and sun.
spewing water heated in tiny teeth for scrap-
by volcanic activity. Photophore A part of ing food (such as algae) Tube-nosed
the body that produces growing on a surface. swimmer A seabird
Iceberg A large mass light in bioluminescent with tubular nostrils
of ice that breaks off animals. Reef A rocky ridge that spends much
from the end of a produced by coral, of its time at sea,
glacier and floats away. Photosynthesis The usually growing in including albatrosses
way plants and algae shallow, sunlit waters. and shearwaters.
Mammal A warm- use the energy of
blooded vertebrate that sunlight to make food Reptile Cold-blooded Upwelling When
produces milk to feed from carbon dioxide vertebrate with scaly water rises up to the
young. Most mammals and water. skin; usually lays hard- ocean’s surface from
are covered in furry shelled eggs on land. the deep (often near
skin, but many aquatic Pinniped A swimming coastlines). A down-
mammals, such as mammal with flippers Sirenian (sea cow) welling is when the
whales, are not. that also moves on A swimming mammal ocean’s surface water
land, such as sea lions, with flippers, including sinks deeper.
Marine Relating to seals, and walruses. manatees. It spends its
oceans and seas. life in water but breathes Vertebrate An animal
Plankton The air through its nostrils. with a backbone.
Microbe A tiny living community of living
thing that can only things that drift with Species A group of Zooxanthella
be seen through a currents in open water. living things that share (zooxanthellae) A
microscope, including Most plankton are common features and microscopic alga that
bacteria, many algae, small, such as algae can only breed with lives inside coral and
and protozoans. and krill. each other. helps nourish it.
152 | OCEAN
Index
Page numbers in bold bigfin reef squid 60 coconut octopus 61
show the most information. billfish 89, 90–91 comets 9
birds 42–45, 106–107 common thresher 93
blackfin icefish 123 conchs 53
black swallower 111 consumers (food chains)
A blue-footed booby 44 84–85
abyssal plains 11 blue shark 93 container ships 133, 142
abyssal zone 81 bluestripe snapper 46 continental shelves 10, 50
Aida shipwreck 136–137 blue whale 105, 148 copepods 83
air circulation 12–13
boobies 44 coralline seaweed 33
albatrosses 106, 107
Bora Bora 51 coral reefs 7, 19, 50, 51, 72–73
algae 73, 74, 83, 84
brachiopods 22 Great Barrier Reef, Australia
American lobster 62
brown pelican 45 70–71, 148
ammonites 23
Bryde’s whale 99, 102 reef life 74–77
angelfish 76
bull shark 68 cormorants 42, 43, 44
anglerfish 110, 147
butterfly fish 76 Cousteau, Jacques 129
antifreeze 146
crabeater seal 123
archerfish 41
crabs 27, 36, 63, 113
arches 29
Arctic fox 119 C ghost crab 38–39
crowned jellyfish 87
Arctic Ocean 7, 21, 115, 117 California sea lion 54–55
Arctic tern 106 candy-cane sea cucumber 64 cruise ships 127, 132
arthropods 27, 36, 38–39, Cape gannet 42 crust, ocean 8–9, 81
62–63, 108, 113 Caribbean reef shark 68–69 crustaceans 36–39, 62–63,
Atlantic mackerel 47 Caribbean reef squid 56 83, 108, 113
Atlantic Ocean 6, 7, 9 cartilaginous fish 68–69, 92–95 curlews 45
Atlantic puffin 42, 43 Caspian Sea 7 currents 16–17
atolls 72, 80 caves 29 cuttlefish 58–59
auks 43, 45, 106, 107 cetaceans 88, 98–105, 115 cyanobacteria 84
Australian giant cuttlefish chemical waste 25, 73, 143, 144 cyclones 13
58–59 Christmas Island red crab 36
Australian pelican 45 Christmas tree worm 74
Chukchi Sea 117 D
clams 37, 56, 57, 112 da Gama, Vasco 129
B climate change 5, 13, 25, 144 Dall’s porpoise 98
baleen whales 96, 99, 100–105 see also global warming damselfish 77
barracudas 66, 89 clown fish 77 day octopus 75
barrel jellyfish 87 clown mantis shrimp 63 deep-sea angler 110
barrier reefs 70–71, 72 clown triggerfish 77 deep-sea exploration
basking shark 96, 97 cnidarians 79, 86–87 130–131
bays 51 coastlines 25, 27, 28–29, 144 deep-sea vents 4, 112–113
beaches 28, 34, 145 see also seashores deep-water currents 17
INDEX | 153
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