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Predation by calanoid copepods on the appendicularian Oikopleura

Predation by calanoid copepods on the appendicularian Oikopleura
Predation by calanoid copepods on the appendicularian Oikopleura
Appendicularians have some of the highest growth rates among metazoans but they are usually outnumbered by the slower growing copepods in mesozooplankton communities. We present experimental evidence that the eggs and juveniles of the appendicularian Oikopleura dioica are actively consumed by various copepod species. Clearance rates of Calanus helgolandicus, Candacia armata, Centropages typicus, Eucalanus crassus, and Temora longicornis on eggs of O. dioica were usually above 300 ml copepod-1 d-1. The ingestion rates of C. helgolandicus on O. dioica eggs did not reach saturation even at the highest egg concentrations (4,560 eggs L-1). Although C. helgolandicus, C. typicus, and C. armata preyed actively on 1-mm-long O. dioica (approximately 0.2 mm in trunk length), predatory pressure decreased with increasing appendicularian size. We suggest that the association of dense appendicularian populations with phytoplankton blooms could be explained by their opportunistic response to beneficial conditions before copepod densities become high enough to cause a decline in appendicularian populations due to predation. Our results indicate that, in addition to the direct shunt of biomass from picoplankton to fish, appendicularians can occupy a similar role to that of microzooplankton in the ocean. They represent an intermediate step in the less efficient, picoplankton–appendicularia–copepod-fish food chain.
0024-3590
303-307
Lopez-Urrutia, Angel
cf075c7b-ef32-4ebf-a9e2-abaabd8dcc6b
Harris, Roger P.
f7aab713-4af2-48c2-a34b-400767df67ad
Smith, Tania
139a242c-13a7-4e6c-ac03-01816b327fcd
Lopez-Urrutia, Angel
cf075c7b-ef32-4ebf-a9e2-abaabd8dcc6b
Harris, Roger P.
f7aab713-4af2-48c2-a34b-400767df67ad
Smith, Tania
139a242c-13a7-4e6c-ac03-01816b327fcd

Lopez-Urrutia, Angel, Harris, Roger P. and Smith, Tania (2004) Predation by calanoid copepods on the appendicularian Oikopleura. Limnology and Oceanography, 49 (1), 303-307.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Appendicularians have some of the highest growth rates among metazoans but they are usually outnumbered by the slower growing copepods in mesozooplankton communities. We present experimental evidence that the eggs and juveniles of the appendicularian Oikopleura dioica are actively consumed by various copepod species. Clearance rates of Calanus helgolandicus, Candacia armata, Centropages typicus, Eucalanus crassus, and Temora longicornis on eggs of O. dioica were usually above 300 ml copepod-1 d-1. The ingestion rates of C. helgolandicus on O. dioica eggs did not reach saturation even at the highest egg concentrations (4,560 eggs L-1). Although C. helgolandicus, C. typicus, and C. armata preyed actively on 1-mm-long O. dioica (approximately 0.2 mm in trunk length), predatory pressure decreased with increasing appendicularian size. We suggest that the association of dense appendicularian populations with phytoplankton blooms could be explained by their opportunistic response to beneficial conditions before copepod densities become high enough to cause a decline in appendicularian populations due to predation. Our results indicate that, in addition to the direct shunt of biomass from picoplankton to fish, appendicularians can occupy a similar role to that of microzooplankton in the ocean. They represent an intermediate step in the less efficient, picoplankton–appendicularia–copepod-fish food chain.

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Published date: 2004

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 54681
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/54681
ISSN: 0024-3590
PURE UUID: 8630b0e8-a575-4f95-a42d-11fb46962bc9

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Date deposited: 17 Jul 2008
Last modified: 08 Jan 2022 07:05

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Contributors

Author: Angel Lopez-Urrutia
Author: Roger P. Harris
Author: Tania Smith

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