- Particle (ecology)
In marine and freshwater
ecology , a particle is a small object. Particles can remain in suspension in the ocean or freshwater, however they eventually settle (rate determined byStokes' law ) and accumulate as sediment. Some can enter the atmosphere through wave action where they can act ascloud condensation nuclei (CCN). Many organisms filter particles out of the water with unique filtration mechanisms (filter feeder s). Particles are often associated with high loads oftoxin s which attach to the surface. As these toxins are passed up the food chain they accumulate in fatty tissue and become increasingly concentrated in predators (seebioaccumulation . Very little is known about the dynamics of particles, especially when they are re-suspended bydredging . They can remain floating in the water and drift over long distances. The decomposition of some particles by bacteria consumes a lot ofoxygen and can cause the water to become hypoxic.Particle analysis
Particle levels in water (or air) can be measured with a
turbidity meter and analyzed with aparticle counter . They can also be scanned with an underwater microscope, such asecoSCOPE . Collected particles of size 20 - 200micrometers hovering in the free water in the vicinity of aharbor had the followingcontaminant levels (table). Many of those contaminants arecarcinogenic .[
thumb|Particles_scanned_with_the_ecoSCOPE microscope. The blue frame is a 1 mm contrast grid.]Contaminant kinetics
It takes a few days until
plankton organisms have filtered the particles and incorporated the toxins into their body fat and tissue: In the southwards flow of the waters of the Hudson off the coast ofNew Jersey , the highest levels of mercury incopepod s have not been found directly in front of the river offNew York but 150 km south, offAtlantic City .Many copepods are then captured by
mysidae ,krill and smallestfish like the juveniles ofatlantic herring - and in each step of thefoodchain the toxin concentrations increase by the factor of 10. The milk of mothers ("Homo sapiens") consuming fish and related products like margerine and eggs in such areas have so high toxin levels that it would be impossible to sell such milk on markets - their babies have much more birth-defects and/or retarded brains and have later difficulties to learn and/or reproduce. Many die at an early age.
Filter of
krill : The first degreefilter setae carry in v-form two rows of second degreesetae , pointing towards the inside of thefeeding basket . The purple ball is one micrometer in size. To display the total area of this fascinating particle filtration structure one would have to [http://www.ecoscope.com/krill/filter/filter7/index.htm tile] 7500 times this image.
Filter basket of a mysid. These 3 cm long animals live close to shore and hover above the sea floor, constantly collecting particles. Mysids are an important food source for herring,cod ,flounder ,striped bass . In polluted areas they have high toxin levelsin their tissue but they are very robust and take a lot of poison before they die. Suchfilter feeding organisms are the reason that much of the materials we throw in the oceans comes back to us in our food.Fact|date=May 2007
ee also
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Marine pollution
*Hypoxia for articles dealing with hypoxia or anoxia in the environment
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