A Brief Discussion on Marine Biology
Received: 02-Mar-2022 / Manuscript No. jmsrd-22-60487 / Editor assigned: 04-Mar-2022 / PreQC No. jmsrd-22-60487 (PQ) / Reviewed: 18-Mar-2022 / QC No. jmsrd-22-60487 / Revised: 21-Mar-2022 / Manuscript No. jmsrd-22-60487 (R) / Published Date: 28-Mar-2022 DOI: 10.4172/2155-9910.1000332
Perspective
Marine biology is the scientific study of the biology of marine life, organisms in the ocean. Given that in biology numerous phyla, families and rubrics have some species that live in the ocean and others that live on land, marine biology classifies species grounded on the terrain rather than on taxonomy [1]. A large proportion of all life on Earth lives in the ocean. The exact size of this large proportion is unknown, since numerous ocean species are still to be discovered. The ocean is a complex three-dimensional world covering roughly 71 of the Earth’s face. The territories studied in marine biology include everything from the bitsy layers of face water in which organisms and abiotic particulars may be trapped in face pressure between the ocean and atmosphere, to the depths of the oceanic fosses, occasionally measures or further beneath the face of the ocean. Specific territories include arms, coral reefs, kelp timbers, seagrass meadows, the surrounds of mounts and thermal reflections, tidepools, muddy, flaxen, and rocky bottoms, and the open ocean (pelagic) zone, where solid objects are rare, and the face of the water is the only visible boundary [2]. The organisms studied range from bitsy phytoplankton and zooplankton to huge cetaceans (jumbos) 25-32 measures (82-105 bases) in length. Marine ecology is the study of how marine organisms interact with each other and the terrain. Marine life is a vast resource, furnishing food, drug, and raw accoutrements, in addition to helping to support recreation and tourism each over the world [3]. At an abecedarian position, marine life helps determine the veritably nature of our earth. Marine organisms contribute significantly to the oxygen cycle and are involved in the regulation of the Earth’s climate. Plagues are in part shaped and defended by marine life, and some marine organisms indeed help produce new land. Numerous species are economically important to humans, including both finfish and shellfish. It’s also getting understood that the well- being of marine organisms and other organisms are linked in abecedarian ways. The mortal body of knowledge regarding the relationship between life in the ocean and important cycles is fleetly growing, with new discoveries being made nearly every day. These cycles include those of matter (similar as the carbon cycle) and of air (similar as Earth’s respiration, and movement of energy through ecosystems including the ocean). Large areas beneath the ocean face remain effectively unexplored [4]. Marine biology can be varied with natural oceanography. Marine life is a field of study both in marine biology and in natural oceanography. Biological oceanography is the study of how organisms affect and are affected by the drugs, chemistry, and geology of the naval system. Biological oceanography substantially focuses on the microorganisms within the ocean; looking at how they’re affected by their terrain and how that affects larger marine brutes and their ecosystem [5]. Biological oceanography is analogous to marine biology, but it studies ocean life from a different perspective. Biological oceanography takes a bottomup approach in terms of the food web, while marine biology studies the ocean from a top-down perspective. Biological oceanography substantially focuses on the ecosystem of the ocean with an emphasis on plankton their diversity (morphology, nutritive sources, motility, and metabolism); their productivity and how that plays a part in the global carbon cycle; and their distribution (predation and life cycle). Biological oceanography also investigates the part of microbes in food webs, and how humans impact the ecosystems in the abysses.
Acknowledgment
The author would like to acknowledge his Department of Marine Sciences Research Center , State University for their support during this paper.
Conflicts of Interest
The author has no known conflicts of interested associated with this paper.
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Citation: Zhang H (2022) A Brief Discussion on Marine Biology. J Marine Sci Res Dev 12: 332. DOI: 10.4172/2155-9910.1000332
Copyright: © 2022 Zhang H. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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