microorganisms in marine environments

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Costal Marine Systems Microorganisms in Marine Environments .

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Page 1: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Costal Marine Systems

Microorganisms in Marine Environments.

Page 2: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

“No aquarium, no tank in a marine land, however spacious it may be, can begin to duplicate the

conditions of the sea. And no dolphin who inhabits one of those aquariums or one of those

marine lands can be considered normal”

~ Jacques Yves Cousteau ~

Page 3: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

What will we discuss?

1.Marine Zones. 2.Trophic Classification.3.Estuaries.4.Salt Wedge.5.Algal Bloom

It’s Types. It’s Effect.

6. Salt Marsh.7. Winogradisky Column.

Page 4: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Marine Zones.

Page 5: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Trophic Classification

Eutrophic

Mesotrophic

Oligotrophic

Page 6: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

1. Eutrophic body of water• Commonly a lake or pond.• Has high biological productivity. • Due to: excessive nutrients,

especially nitrogen and phosphorus.

Trophic Classification

Algal bloom in a village river in the mountains China

Page 7: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

2. Mesotrophic body of water

Trophic Classification

•Lakes with an intermediate level of productivity.

• These lakes are commonly clear water lakes and ponds with beds of submerged aquatic plants and medium levels of nutrients

Page 8: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

3. Oligotrophic body of water

Trophic Classification

•Lake with low primary productivity, the result of low nutrient content.

•These lakes have low algal production, and consequently, often have very clear waters, with high drinking-water quality.

Page 9: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Estuaries• Estuary is semi-enclosed coastal region where

river meets the sea.

Ocean

River Salt wedge

Page 10: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Salt wedge Salt wedge is formed because salt water is

denser than fresh water. So salt water sink below and overlying with

fresh water.

Page 11: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Changes in this region • According to the distance from the river and sea

the amount of salt water decline.

• The distance the salt wedge interrupt the estuary is not static and changes with tides

• This change in the environment leads to change in the living organisms and microbial community that live in this region…..

Page 12: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Change in Distance of sea

and river

Salt conc.

Microbial communities

Page 13: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Microbes in this region • Adapt to the salinity. • Most protists and fungi produce osmtatically

active carbohydrates. • Prokaryotes : regulate their internal

potassium or special amino acids such as ecoine and betaine.

Page 14: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Inhabitants • Halotolerant Microbes!!!

Page 15: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

• Halophilic: Cant live without high concentrations of salt.

• Halotolerant: Can withstand variations in salt concentration.

ARE HALOPHILIC AND HALOTOLERANT THE SAME

NO

Page 16: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

“The sea, the great unifier, is man's only hope. Now, as never before, the old phrase has a literal

meaning: we are all in the same boat.”

~ Jacques Yves Cousteau ~

Page 17: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Pollution • Although estuaries are

the most important region for diversity of organisms and other microbial communities it is the most polluted marine environment.

Page 18: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Disaster of industries !!!

• Industries dumb their wastes in rivers and oceans without fear of consequences..

• The clean up of rivers and oceans continues from the 17th century till this days….

Page 19: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Where is the problem ??

Organic Material Nutrient Chemoorga

notroph

Anoxic conditions

O2

O2

O2

O2

O2

Devoid all microscopic life

Page 20: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

What if Photoautotrophic!!??

Phosphorus

Nitrogen

A

A

A

A

A

A

c

cc c

c

c

Algae

CyanoBacteria

Page 21: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

A lot of Algae and Cyanobacteria !!!???

Then Lottssss Of Fooooodddd

Page 22: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Harmful Algal Bloom

OMG!!! THAT’S TOO MUCH

Page 23: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Algal Bloom • An algal bloom is a rapid increase or

accumulation in the population of algae (typically microscopic) in a water system.

• Some blooms may be recognized by discoloration of the water resulting from the high density of pigmented cells.

Page 24: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Harmful Algal Bloom • If microbes produce TOXIC products or are in

themselves toxic to other organisms such as fish and shellfish.

• HAB (Harmful Algal Bloom ) also called: Red Tide. ??WHY?

• Because the microbial density is so great that the water becomes red or pink.

Page 25: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Result !!!

Page 26: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Causative Microbes • Diatoms of genus Pseudonitzschia Spp

Production of neurotoxins

Page 27: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

• Caused by Dinoflagellates producing a neurotoxin cause brevetoxin

Causative Microbes

AlexandriumSpp

Page 28: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Paralytic shellfish poisoning

Page 29: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Brevetoxin • Produced by dinoflagellate called Karina

brevis.. • Killed number of endangered species and

dolphins.. • Direct exposure to this microbe cause

neurological damage to human, including short-term memory loss.

Page 30: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

~SALT MARSHES~

Page 31: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Salt marsh • Not a mixture between salt + fresh water It is only Salty water.

Very Dynamic Microbial Community

Page 32: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

Winogradisky Column Simulation To The Natural Microbial Community

Page 33: Microorganisms in Marine Environments
Page 34: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

• What are we need to build it?

Winogradisky Column

Mud ( Salt marsh sediment) Environment

Shredded newspaper Carbon Source

Calcium Carbonate CO2

Calcium Sulfate Sulfur source

Page 35: Microorganisms in Marine Environments

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• THAN YOU

END OF STEPS

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