The Marine Environment: Background Information
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Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve hosts three major marine ecosystems or environments - continental shelf, coastline and fjord estuaries - and is one of the few protected areas in the world that includes extensive saltwater habitat within its jurisdiction. Almost one-fifth of the Park consists of marine waters, which are never more than 30 miles from the coastline. This proximity guarantees nutrient-rich waters from seasonal runoffs and tidal turbulence. The nutritionally-rich waters, coupled with the long daylight hours during the spring, produce booming communities of marine life that provide an abundant food supply for animal life in and out of the sea.
Sea urchins and giant kelp THE OCEAN ENVIRONMENT Glacier Bay contains a very complicated oceanographic system within a relatively small area. This complexity is one of the reasons why such an unusual variety of marine life is found here. The bay is a network of large, U-shaped valleys that, once, were filled by glaciers but now are flooded by the ocean and fed by streams and rivers. As the glaciers retreated, the ocean invaded the bay, creating a wide array of underwater environments, often with overlapping biological communities. These communities are part of a huge, complex and extremely productive marine food web, which is affected by the nutrients available, the water temperature and its salinity, and the topography of the ocean floor. The bulk of this marine productivity is driven by countless billions of tiny plant-like creatures - called phytoplankton - that float suspended in a shallow band of water mainly in the Middle Bay where sunlight can penetrate. The phytoplankton are too small to be seen with the naked eye. Glacier Bay supports incredibly dense populations of phytoplankton that last throughout the spring, summer, and fall. Nutrients Temperature Salinity
Bathymetric map of Glacier Bay Bathymetry Light
Phytoplankton WHO LIVES THERE? Phytoplankton
Zooplankton Zooplankton
Kelp forest Vegetation
Life in the sea Fish and Other Sea Animals Seabirds
Sea otter in Glacier Bay Marine Mammals Also at home are the sea otters, who can be found in the shallow waters, on the rocky shores and in the tidal estuaries. Sea otters are considered a keystone species, an indicator of the health of the near shore ecosystem. In particular, they are depended upon to keep the sea urchin populations in check because, when their growth is out of control, the urchins decimate the kelp forests. Kelp forests not only act as fish nurseries, they provide shelter and are foraging grounds for other sea life, and act as shelter against severe winter storms. SEASONAL CHANGES While the output of phytoplankton and other vegetation explodes in the spring and early summer, other marine life also follow seasonal changes. Herring and cod release their eggs into the abundant plankton while skates "produce large yolk-rich eggs" from energy stored earlier. This is also the time when marine birds and mammals put on fat to last through the lean times. Summer doesn't last long and, when winter begins to take hold, several species migrate southward. Most of the remaining species slow down, rest, and wait for the spring. RESOURCES Glacier Bay - Ocean Habitat http://www.nps.gov/glba/naturescience/oceans.htm Kid's Planet - Web of Life http://www.kidsplanet.org/tt/seaotter/pdf/readlife.pdf Glacier Bay: Natural Features and Ecosystems http://www.nps.gov/glba/naturescience/naturalfeaturesandecosystems.htm USGS Marine-Habitat http://www.absc.usgs.gov/research/seabird_foragefish/marinehabitat/home.html >>Unit Outline |
Did You Know?
The gritty, silica-rich stems of horsetails were traditionally used for cleaning and some would say rival the finest of steel wools.