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Ocean
Zones
From the seashore to the deepest depths, oceans are home to some
of the most diverse life on Earth.
There are big animals and little ones; long and short ones, multicolored
and drab ones, and those that just sit while others that never
stop swimming. There are even some organisms that light up.
Oceanographers divide the ocean into five broad zones according
to how far down sunlight penetrates:
the epipelagic, or sunlit zone: the top layer of the ocean where
enough sunlight penetrates for plants to carry on photosynthesis.
the mesopelagic, or twilight, zone: a dim zone where some light
penetrates, but not enough for plants to grow.
the bathypelagic, or midnight, zone: the deep ocean layer where
no light penetrates.
the abyssal zone: the pitch-black bottom layer of the ocean; the
water here is almost freezing and its pressure is immense.
the hadal zone: the waters found in the ocean's deepest trenches.
Plants are found only in the sunlit zone where there is enough
light for photosynthesis, however, animals are found at all depths
of the oceans though their numbers are greater near the surface
where food is plentiful.
Still, over 90 percent of all species dwell on the ocean bottom
where a single rock can be home to over ten major groups such
as corals, mollusks and sponges.
Below is a scale model of the ocean zones, from the warm sunlit
waters of the surface to the cold dark depths of the Mariana Trench,
the deepest point in the oceans at 36,200 feet (11,033 m).
Notice how shallow the sunlit zone is compared to the midnight
or abyssal zones.
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