OCEAN RESOURCES NOTES
The ______ is one of Earth’s most valuable resources!
Things we use the ocean for:
· ______ (fish and shellfish, shrimp, oysters, crabs, mussels, lobster, other shellfish, and seaweed)
· ______(travel and shipping)
· ______ (cruises, swimming, boating)
· ______ (salt, sand, gravel, copper, nickel, iron, and other minerals)
· ______ (very valuable resource, but obtaining it can be very risky)
***Most of these resources are ______, which means that we can use them all up and be left with nothing…
The ocean plays a key role in removing ______ from the atmosphere and providing ______.
The ocean offers new hopes in ______and might be the key to new treatments for fighting diseases.
OCEAN RESOURCES THAT SUPPORT MARINE LIFE
-What are the most important facts that determine the type of organisms that live in different areas from the
ocean______, ______, and ______.
-Dissolved gases in the ocean come from ______this is important to ocean life
because?______
-Why are there more marine animals along the shorelines of the ocean than out in the deep waters of the
ocean?______
RIVET
______:
______:
______:
______:
Prediction about article (use at least 3 of the vocabulary words)
Reflection on article:
Ocean Resources – THE FACTS Homework
Ocean Resource: FoodàFish
Why is it important?
How do we use it?
How are humans harming the ocean by using this resource?
Ocean Resource: Water à Salt Water
DESALINATION =
Why is it important?
How do we use it?
How are humans harming the ocean by using this resource?
Ocean Resource: Minerals à Diamonds, metal compounds, gravels, and sands
Why is it important?
How do we use it?
How are humans harming the ocean by using this resource?
Ocean Resource: Oil à gasoline and diesel
Why is it important?
How do we use it?
How are humans harming the ocean by using this resource?
Ocean Resource: Transportation / Shipping
Why is it important?
How do we use it?
How are humans harming the ocean by using this resource?
FISHING FACTS:
· Fish are important to the economy in every country
· Fisheries (all of the fishing activities in the ocean) today provide about 16% of the world’s protein
· Fishing in such mass quantities impact the environment
· Overfishing is a marine conservation issue… BIG impact on the environment
· Overfishing has led to a decrease in the amount of fish available. This is bad because the world’s human population is rising. Basically, we have more mouths to feed and less fish to feed them with. Not good.
DESALINATION FACTS
· Freshwater, as we all know, is a limited resource.
· Desalination is the process of taking the salt out of salt water so we can use it like freshwater.
· Desalinated water can be used for drinking, irrigation, or in industry.
· Table salt can be a byproduct of the desalination process (a byproduct is a useful substance made during a process)
· The desalination process can be harmful to ocean life, especially to plankton, fish eggs and larva, and other small ocean organisms that may get caught in the intake valves.
MINING FACTS:
· Diamonds are found in greater quantity in the oceans than on land!
· Metal compounds, gravels, and sands are popular
· BIG impact on the environment… VERY BAD for ecosystems
· Dredging (pulling a net across the bottom of the ocean catching everything in its path) destructs habitats and kills unnecessarily. Also, a cloud of sediment blocks sunlight and interferes with photosynthesis
OIL RIG FACTS:
· AKA “Black Gold” – One of the ocean’s greatest resources
· We make gasoline for cars, diesel fuel for our trucks and ships, and jet fuel for our airplanes.
· Oil is also used to generate electricity, heat our buildings, lubricate our machines, and make plastics, detergents, types of rubber, and chemicals.
· Oil has made a HUGE difference in our lives – nearly 1/3 of the world’s oil comes from offshore fields in our oceans.
· Oil accounts for almost half of the world’s sea trade
· Oil comes from the skeletal remains of phytoplankton and zooplankton that settled to the sea floor, mixed with mud and silt, and over millions of years, formed organic-rich sedimentary layers. These layers are buried deep under layer upon layer of sediment. As depth increased, pressure and temperature also increased. Under these conditions, over long periods of time, the skeletal remains changed into hydrocarbons – compounds of hydrogen and carbon. This is oil.
SHIPPING FACTS:
· Shipping (moving cargo with ships across oceans) is a major use of our oceans.
· Types of ships: Naval (trade and navy), Commercial (trade), Recreational (cruises)
· Low impact on the environment J