marine
(adjective)
Of, or pertaining to, the sea (marine biology, marine insurance).
Examples of marine in the following topics:
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Marine Habitats
- The marine environment supplies many kinds of habitats that support marine life.
- The marine environment supplies many kinds of habitats that support life.
- Marine life partially depends on the saltwater that is in the sea ("marine" comes from the Latin "mare," meaning sea or ocean).
- Marine habitats can be modified by their inhabitants.
- Coral reefs provide marine habitats for tube sponges, which in turn become marine habitats for fishes.
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Viral Roles in Ecosystems
- This is typified by the role of viruses in marine ecology.
- Viruses are the main agents responsible for the rapid destruction of harmful algal blooms, which often kill other marine life.
- Like any organism, marine mammals are susceptible to viral infections.
- As mentioned, marine viruses are mostly bacteriophages, or phages.
- This represents a fraction of the viral diversity seen in teaspoon of marine water.
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Anoxic Hydrocarbon Oxidation
- Marine environments are especially vulnerable.
- Despite its toxicity, a considerable fraction of crude oil entering marine systems is eliminated by the hydrocarbon-degrading activities of microbial communities.
- Anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) is a microbial process that occurs in anoxic marine sediments.
- It is estimated that almost 90% of all the methane that arises from marine sediments is oxidized anaerobically by this process.
- Describe the process of anoxic hydrocarbon oxidation in regards to marine environments
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Sea Coral and Sea Anemone Zooxanthellae
- Zooxanthellae refers to a variety of species that form symbiotic relationships with other marine organisms, particularly coral.
- Cnidarians that are associated with Symbiodinium occur mostly in warm oligotrophic (nutrient-poor) marine environments where they are often the dominant constituents of benthic communities.
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Planctomycetes
- Planctomycetes are a phylum of aquatic bacteria and are found in samples of brackish, marine, and fresh water.
- They are found in samples of brackish, marine, and fresh water.
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Psychrophilic Crenarchaeota
- Initially, the Crenarchaeota were thought to be sulfur-dependent extremophiles but recent studies have identified characteristic Crenarchaeota environmental rRNA indicating the organism may be the most abundant archaea in the marine environment.
- Beginning in 1992, data were published that reported sequences of genes belonging to the Crenarchaea in marine environments making these bacteria psychrophiles or cryophiles.
- Different microbes are responsible for each step in the marine environment.
- Several groups of ammonia oxidizing bacteria (AOB) are known in the marine environment, including Nitrosomonas, Nitrospira, and Nitrosococcus.
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Ocean Floor
- Recently there has been the discovery of abundant marine life in the deep sea, especially around hydrothermal vents.
- Large deep sea communities of marine life have been discovered around black and white smokers – hydrothermal vents emitting typical chemicals toxic to humans and most of the vertebrates.
- This marine life receives its energy from both the extreme temperature difference (typically a drop of 150 degrees) and from chemosynthesis by bacteria.
- Marine life also flourishes around seamounts that rise from the depths, where fish and other sea life congregate to spawn and feed.
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The Carbon Cycle
- The carbon cycle describes the flow of carbon from the atmosphere to the marine and terrestrial biospheres, and the earth's crust.
- Carbon dioxide leaves the atmosphere through photosynthesis, thus entering the terrestrial and marine biospheres.
- Marine Biosphere: The carbon cycle in the marine biosphere is very similar to that in the terrestrial ecosystem.
- Much of the carbon on the earth's lithosphere (about 80%) is stored in limestone, which was formed from the calcium carbonate from the shells of marine animals.
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Viral Genomes in Nature
- They infect and destroy the bacteria in aquatic microbial communities, comprising the most important mechanism of recycling carbon in the marine environment.
- Viruses are the main agents responsible for the rapid destruction of harmful algal blooms, which often kill other marine life.
- The effects of marine viruses are far-reaching.
- Like any organism, marine mammals are susceptible to viral infections.
- Many other viruses, including caliciviruses, herpesviruses, adenoviruses, and parvoviruses circulate in marine mammal populations.
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Nanoarchaeum and Aciduliprofundum
- Nanoarchaeum equitans is a species of marine Archaea discovered in a hydrothermal vent off the coast of Iceland.
- Nanoarchaeum equitans is a species of marine Archaea that was discovered in 2002 in a hydrothermal vent off the coast of Iceland on the Kolbeinsey Ridge by Karl Stetter.