Marine Bio Mid-Term Word Scramble
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Question | Answer |
What is marine biology? | Study of animals living in the sea |
The scientific Method can be best described as | procedures used to learn about our world |
The factors that might affect observations are called | variables |
A control can be best defined as | a variable that is kept constant in an experiment |
How many major oceans are found in the world? | 6 |
What is bathymetry? | changing depth of the sea floor |
What is the world's largest and deepest ocean? | Pacific |
The main feature of plate tectonics is | ocean floors are constantly moving |
The force responsible for plate movement is | convention currents |
A mid-oceanic ridge forms by faults in the Earth's crust called | divergent boundaries |
A continental margins generally consist of | continental slope, rise and shelf |
What is a shallow, underwater extension of a continent? | continental slope |
The property of water where air and water meet is called | surface tension |
What property of water moderates temperature fluctuations is called | heat capacity |
The total amount of substances dissolved in seawater is termed | salinity |
Which of the following methods is most commonly used to determine salinity? | density/specific gravity |
Name the distance between one one wave crest and the next: | wavelength |
What is the effect of the Earth's rotation on the winds moving across its surface? | Coriolis effect |
How does a spring tide occur? | gravitational pull of moon and sun |
How many degrees does the ocean upper layers move due to Echman Spiral? | 45 degrees |
What are the main solutes in ocean water? | Na,Cl |
What causes waves? | wind |
What influences waves? | fetch, duration, wind speed |
What are the characteristics of living things? | growth, reproduce, metabolize |
What is the correct taxonomic level? | kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species |
What is a characteristics of plankton? | have limited locomotion and are at the mercy of the water current |
What are phytoplankton? | photosynthetic autotrophs |
What is another name for heterotroph? | consumer |
What are dinoflagellates? | photosynthetic organisms |
What are zooplankton? | heterotrophic organisms, consumers |
Are all plankton microscopic? | No |
Which organisms consume plankton? | anemone, scallops, whales |
Most larval stages of many invertebrates start out as | zooplankton |
What causes red tides? | dinoflagellates |
What level must be zero before fish can be acclimated into your tank? | nitrite, ammonia |
What is the correct salinity for your aquarium? | 1.021 |
Which factors should be taken into considering when purchasing livestock? | ease of care, aggressiveness, compatibility |
What is the most important part of maintaining a marine aquarium? | salinity |
What is the oceanography? | physical, chemical and biological aspects of ocean |
What is the correct pH of your aquarium? | 8.2 |
Phytoplankton consists of | diatoms and dinoflagellates |
What affects sinking rates of plankton? | buoyancy due to gas-filled floats, increased surface area, increase water resistance |
Give an example of a phytoplankton? | diatoms, dinoflagellates |
What limits the growth of phytoplankton? | depth of the ocean |
What are adaptations of plankton? | secreting oils for buoyancy, spiny extensions, modified fins |
Which organisms display bioluminescence? | phytoplankton |
Meroplankton spend only part of their life as | plankton |
Give an example of a holoplankton | barnacle larva |
Plankton can be found in this ocean zone | pelagic and photic |
What is the first thing you do when setting up an aquarium? | rinse all equipment with freshwater |
What is a distinguishing feature of a virus? | capsid |
How do eukaryotes differ from prokaryotes? | nucleus |
How are seaweeds different from algae? | multicellular |
What is the stem-like structure of seaweeds? | stipe |
What is a thallus? | complete body |
How are marine plants characterized? | eukaryotic, multicellular, bottom-dwellers |
Kingdom Animalia is characterized by | mostly multicellular |
What phylum do sponges belong to? | Porifera |
Large opening of a sponge is called? | osculum |
What do all porifera share in common? | choanocytes |
Sponges and cnidarians share these features? | mesoglea, radial symmetry, multicellular |
What type of symmetry do porifera have? | asymmetry |
What phylum do anemones belong to? | Cnidaria |
What life stage is a jellyfish? | medusa |
What are comb jellies? | organisms with mesoglea and eight bands of cilia |
Which phyla doesn't have tissues or organs? | porifera, cnidarians, ctenophora |
How are flatworms characterized? | bilateral symmetry, acoelomate |
What is a distinguishing feature of a nematode? | proboscis, pseudocoelomate |
What features do platyhelminthes and nematoda share? | bilateral symmetry, endoderm, ectoderm and mesoderm |
What are general characteristics of Phylum Annelida? | segmentation, coelomate |
What features do Phyla Nematoda and Annelida share? | bilateral symmetry, complete digestive system, central nervous system |
What type of symmetry do mollusks have? | bilateral symmetry |
What characteristics do all mollusks have? | mantle |
What is a radula? | a structure used to scrap off food from rocks |
Which class of mollusca is the most intelligent? | cephalopoda |
This structure is reduced in the squid? | shell |
How is class gastropoda characterized? | foot attached to its stomach |
What are the features of arthropods? | digestive system, jointed legs, proboscis to capture prey |
What type of skeleton do arthropods have? | exoskeleton |
What class does a lobster belong to? | crustacea |
What class does a horseshoe crab belong to? | merostomata |
What are the features of echinoderms? | water vascular system, endoskeleton |
What type of body symmetry do echinoderms have? | radial |
What structures do echinoderms use for movement? | tube feet |
Which organisms belong to the phylum Echinodermata? | sea star, sea cucumbers, brittle stars |
Give an example of class Crinoidea | feather stars |
What class does the sea cucumbers belong to? | holothuroidea |
What type of scales do sharks have? | Placoid |
How do sharks regulate their buoyancy? | their liver produces oil which is less dense than water |
What is countershading? | darker colored dorsal side; lighter on their ventral side |
What is the difference between skates and rays? | give birth |
What is oviparity? | embryos are laid in egg cases |
What are baby sharks called | pups |
What does it mean to be demersal? | live on the bottom of the ocean |
What type of scales do bony fish have? | ctenoid |
What organs are used for all of the sharks six senses? | ampullae of lorenzini, spiracles, lateral line, nares, mouth, ears |
What are Chondrichthyes fish made of? | cartilage |
What is the importance of the spiracles? | breathe when mouth is closed |
Why are sharks considered to be "living fossils"? | Sharks lived in the oceans long before animals on land |
Created by:
jlafferty
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