Thursday, 19 May 2011

Sea Food: Research a Cuisine and Present it to the Class

Seafood is categorised into fish, crustaceans with a hard shell (crabs, lobsters, bugs, mussels, oysters, scallops), and molluscs which have no shell (squid, octopus).


Blue Swimmer Crabs


Octopus



Squid



Oysters




Deep Fried Fish





Human    



Blue Swimmer Crabs




Grilling Octopus






Scallops




Grilled Trout




Smoking Trout



Baked Fish



Salmon




Trout Fillets




Fish Soup




Baked Fish



Mussels


Balmain Bugs

Make a recipe and cook the meal in front of the class.

Marine Animal


Choose a marine animal and describe how they live in the ocean.

Food, Habitat, Predators for example.

Angler Fish



All about the Angler Fish


Fast Facts

Type:
Fish
Diet:
Carnivore
Size:
8 in (20 cm) up to 3.3 ft (1 m)
Weight:
Up to 110 lbs (50 kg)
Group name:
School
Did you know?
The anglerfish's lighted lure glows with the help of millions of bioluminescent bacteria.
Size relative to a tea cup:
Illustration: Anglerfish compared with tea cup
The angry-looking deep sea anglerfish has a right to be cranky. It is quite possibly the ugliest animal on the planet, and it lives in what is easily Earth's most inhospitable habitat: the lonely, lightless bottom of the sea.
There are more than 200 species of anglerfish, most of which live in the murky depths of the Atlantic and Antarctic oceans, up to a mile below the surface, although some live in shallow, tropical environments. Generally dark gray to dark brown in color, they have huge heads and enormous crescent-shaped mouths filled with sharp, translucent teeth. Some angler fish can be quite large, reaching 3.3 feet (1 meter) in length. Most however are significantly smaller, often less than a foot.
Their most distinctive feature, worn only by females, is a piece of dorsal spine that protrudes above their mouths like a fishing pole—hence their name. Tipped with a lure of luminous flesh this built-in rod baits prey close enough to be snatched. Their mouths are so big and their bodies so pliable, they can actually swallow prey up to twice their own size.
The male, which is significantly smaller than the female, has no need for such an adaptation. In lieu of continually seeking the vast abyss for a female, it has evolved into a permanent parasitic mate. When a young, free-swimming male angler encounters a female, he latches onto her with his sharp teeth. Over time, the male physically fuses with the female, connecting to her skin and bloodstream and losing his eyes and all his internal organs except the testes. A female will carry six or more males on her body.

Ocean Movie

Design a Poster and explain what the movie is about.

Did you know?

Guinness Book of Records

Ocean Facts

Some Ocean Facts

The coolest place in the oceans is Bikini Bottom

The oceans occupy nearly 71% of our planet's surface

More than 97% of all our planet's water is contained in the ocean

The top 3 metres of the ocean hold as much heat as our entire atmosphere

The average depth of the ocean is more than 4 kilometres

The oceans provide 99 percent of the Earth's living space- the largest space in our universe known to be inhabited by living organisms

More than 90% of this habitat exists in the deep sea known as the abyss

Less than 10% of this living space has been explored by humans

Mount Everest (the highest point on the Earth's surface 5.49 miles) is more than 1 mile shorter than the Challenger Deep (the deepest point in the ocean at 6.86 miles)

The longest continuous mountain chain known to exist in the Universe resides in the ocean at more than 40,000 miles long

The Monterey Bay Submarine Canyon is deeper and larger in volume than the Grand Canyon

Environmental Disasters in the Oceans

BP Deepwater Horizon, Gulf of Mexico Spill 2010


Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone
Image credit: NOAA via Science Daily
American farmers love their chemical fertilizers and pesticides, and apply them liberally to their crops. Unfortunately, these chemicals – along with nitrogen-rich livestock waste – seeps from farmlands along the Mississippi River into the water and eventually, down into the Gulf of Mexico, where they have led to an oxygen-starved “dead zone” the size of New Jersey. Ocean dead zones cannot support sea life.
Nitrogen in the chemicals and animal waste spur the growth of algae, which is eaten by zooplankton. Those microscopic creatures then excrete pellets that sink to the bottom of the ocean and decay, a process that depletes the water of oxygen.
Researchers set out last July to study the dead zone, taking water samples and measuring the total affected area. Some water samples showed no oxygen at all, and smelled of hydrogen sulfide, a rotten egg smell that indicates organic sediments on the sea floor.
The dead zone has grown steadily over the past few decades. Though it tends to disappear in October once cold weather sets in, there’s a “legacy” left behind due to the fact that not all organic matter on the bottom decays in any given year. This means that even if the same amount of nitrogen is released into the Gulf year after year, the dead zone will get larger.
A recent study identified many of the sources of the nitrogen runoff along the Mississippi River, and the government plans to help states focus their pollution-reduction efforts to prevent some of the runoff from ending up in the river.
Great Pacific Garbage Patch
Image credit: Wikipedia



The Great Pacific Garbage Patch, also known as the Pacific Ocean Trash Gyre, Eastern Garbage Patch or Pacific Trash Vortex, is a huge swirling mess of plastic in the North Central Pacific Ocean estimated by some to be the size of the United States. In fact, it’s even been referred to as the world’s largest garbage dump. The Algalita Marine Research Foundationfound in 2008 that plastic outnumbers plankton in some areas of the patch by 48 to 1. Algalita’s education advisor Anna Cummins described the pollution just under the surface of the water as ‘plastic soup’.
It formed gradually over time as a result of marine pollution, gathered together in one area by oceanic currents, and may contain over 100 million tons of debris. Charles Moore, a California-based sea captain and ocean researcher who came upon the patch after competing in a sailing race, estimates that 80% of the garbage comes from land-based sources, with the other 20% coming from ships.
Much of the plastic in this patch and elsewhere in the ocean end up in the digestive systems of sea creatures including turtles, jellyfish, marine birds and other sea life.


The company responsible for an oil well that spewed its contents into the Timor Sea for more than two months says it knows what caused the environmental disaster.
But PTTEP Australasia chief financial officer Jose Martins has refused to reveal what the reasons for the Montara oil well spill and West Atlas rig fire are.
The well began spilling oil on August 21, while the fire broke out on the rig on Sunday. The clean-up effort was hampered by the time it took to get a second rig in place to drill a relief well, while it also took several attempts to finally stop the leak yesterday.
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"Yes we do (know the causes), there's a range of causes but we're not going to go into it," Mr Martins told ABC Radio.
"There's going to be a proper legal process that would be undertaken to find out what caused the leak.
He also revealed he expected an insurance claim to recover costs of the incident to be "much higher" than the $170 million it had cost the company so far, to take into account costs of the rig fire.
The clean-up has cost the company about $5 million so far, but this could also rise, Mr Martins said.
PTTEP would not request any federal government help.
The clean-up was expected to take another two months, but it could take up to seven years to work through the environmental effects of the disaster, Mr Martins said.


Read more: http://www.watoday.com.au/environment/we-know-what-caused-oil-spill-20091104-hws6.html#ixzz1MqKFN6Ax

Underwater Ocean Resort


Use your imagination.

What things would you need to support human life underwater?

Poseidon Resort, Fiji

Marine Life in the Oceans

What lives in the Oceans?

Ocean Speed

How are the speed of the Oceans measured?

Ocean Depth

How do we measure the depth of oceans?

Shipwrecks



Follow these links to get information on 3 shipwrecks. You need to include a map of the location of the shipwrecks and half a page about the ship, why the ship went down, who was on board and whether anyone survived.

Famous Australian Shipwrecks

South Australian Shipwrecks

Famous Shipwrecks around the World


Video of the Titanic

Information about the Worlds Oceans and Seas




Oceans of the World Due Monday Week 7

Design and Decorate a Double Sided Title Page for the project.

This is something that you can do yourself