Life in the Open Ocean. Joseph J. Torres

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       Library of Congress Cataloging‐in‐Publication Data

      Names: Torres, Joseph J., 1950– author. | Bailey, Thomas G., 1945– author. | Wiley‐Blackwell (Firm), publisher.

      Title: Life in the open ocean : the biology of pelagic species / Joseph J Torres, Thomas G Bailey.

      Description: Hoboken, NJ : Wiley‐Blackwell, 2022. | Includes bibliographical references and index.

      Identifiers: LCCN 2021021994 (print) | LCCN 2021021995 (ebook) | ISBN 9781405145299 (cloth) | ISBN 9781119840305 (adobe pdf) | ISBN 9781119840312 (epub)

      Subjects: LCSH: Marine biology. | Oceanography.

      Classification: LCC QH91 .T67 2022 (print) | LCC QH91 (ebook) | DDC 577.7–dc23

      LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021021994 LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2021021995

      Cover Design: Wiley

      Cover Image: © Danté Fenolio

       From JJT – To my family, near and far – especially mom and dad and my lovely wife Linda for her incredible patience with me and our other family member: the book.

       From TGB – To my lovely wife, Jan for her love and support through the years.

       From Both of Us

       To our mentors, Charlotte Mangum, Jim Childress, George Somero, and Bruce Robison, a constant source of inspiration to this day.

       And especially to Linda M. Torres, our gatekeeper, editor, and Angel of Detail, for keeping us on the straight and narrow, and without whom this book would still be “in preparation.”

      Preface

      Most of the planet earth (over 60% of it) is deep ocean. Within the oceanic realm are two basic ecosystems, the ocean bottom, a two‐dimensional environment containing creatures that creep, crawl, burrow, or lie in wait for prey, and the immense, three‐dimensional pelagic region that lies above it, the largest living space on the planet, containing the swimmers and drifters. The deep ocean bottom has been the focus of a lot of excitement over the last 50 years, with many expeditions to the fabulous communities inhabiting the hydrothermal vents at our planet’s oceanic ridges. More recently, the thrilling discovery of deep coral reefs off Australia has captured the public eye, showing that still more oceanic discoveries may yet await us.

      More fascinating yet are the communities of marine animals that inhabit the oceans’ pelagic realm, and the creatures’ adaptations to an environment devoid of barriers to movement in three‐dimensional space. Many people are familiar with the term “plankton,” the tiny plants and animals that drift with the ocean currents. More are familiar with the large pelagic species such as tuna, sharks, and swordfish, not only from pictures or fishing trips but also from the dinner table. The large, highly capable swimming species like tuna and sharks are termed “nekton.” In between the tiny drifters and the strong swimmers are an entire community of animals that are familiar mainly to oceanographers but are the critical link between the small and the large. Animals in the intermediate community are not as capable at swimming as the tunas but are better at it than the small zooplankton. Collectively, the creatures are known as the micronekton and macrozooplankton, and they make up one of the largest animal communities on planet earth.

      The nekton, micronekton, and macrozooplankton include a variety of different animal groups. Several different families of fishes are represented, many with unusual adaptations such as light organs like fireflies, huge gapes to allow them to swallow prey larger than themselves, and large tubular eyes. Among the invertebrates are shrimp similar to the ones we enjoy in shrimp cocktails and other crustaceans that can produce clouds of biological light or live inside jellyfishes. Among the jellies are species larger than a meter across and those that can double their population size in a matter of days by reproducing asexually.

      Topics covered in the book include basic physical oceanography, properties of water, physical variables that covary with depth such as light, temperature, and pressure and how animals have adapted to cope with each. Animal groups covered in depth (no pun intended) include the Cnidaria, or stinging jellies, the ctenophores or comb jellies, pelagic nemerteans, pelagic annelids, the Crustacea, the Mollusca including the “swimming snails” and cephalopods, the invertebrate chordates, including the salps, pyrosomes, and larvaceans, and lastly, the incredible fishes, focusing on the micronekton but also including the sharks,

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