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Marine snow

Photo by Brian38
Published on Project Noah
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48.3364, -124.667

Field Notes

Description:

This is marine detritus and is mostly dead particulate organic materials such as broken seashell, coral and barnacles. It is an important component for marine ecosystems as it host microorganisms. For an example - Sanderlings with their relatively short bills will feed on detritus, which contains microorganisms.

Habitat:

Along beach at Makah Bay at low tide. I got up early that morning to do some birding, but what I got was this - an unbelievable herringbone pattern that was everywhere I looked.

Notes:

A characteristic type of food chain called the detritus cycle takes place involving detritus feeders (detritivores), detritus and the microorganisms that multiply on it. For example, mud flats are inhabited by many univalves which are detritus feeders. When these detritus feeders take in detritus with microorganisms multiplying on it, they mainly break down and absorb the microorganisms, which are rich in proteins, and excrete the detritus, which is mostly complex carbohydrates, having hardly broken it down at all. At first this dung is a poor source of nutrition, and so univalves pay no attention to it, but after several days, microorganisms begin to multiply on it again, its nutritional balance improves, and so they eat it again. Through this process of eating the detritus many times over and harvesting the microorganisms from it, the detritus thins out, becomes fractured and becomes easier for the microorganisms to use, and so the complex carbohydrates are also steadily broken down and disappear over time.

What is left behind by the detritivores is then further broken down and recycled by decomposers, such as bacteria and fungi.

This detritus cycle plays a large part in the so-called purification process, whereby organic materials carried in by rivers is broken down and disappears, and an extremely important part in the breeding and growth of marine resources. In ecosystems on land, far more essential material is broken down as dead material passing through the detritus chain than is broken down by being eaten by animals in a living state. In both land and aquatic ecosystems, the role played by detritus is too large to ignore.(Wikipedia)

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