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Copepod hatching success in marine ecosystems with high diatom concentrations

Copepod hatching success in marine ecosystems with high diatom concentrations
Copepod hatching success in marine ecosystems with high diatom concentrations
Diatoms dominate spring bloom phytoplankton assemblages in temperate waters and coastal upwelling regions of the global ocean. Copepods usually dominate the zooplankton in these regions and are the prey of many larval fish species. Recent laboratory studies suggest that diatoms may have a deleterious effect on the success of copepod egg hatching. These findings challenge the classical view of marine food-web energy flow from diatoms to fish by means of copepods. Egg mortality is an important factor in copepod population dynamics, thus, if diatoms have a deleterious in situ effect, paradoxically, high diatom abundance could limit secondary production. Therefore, the current understanding of energy transfer from primary production to fisheries in some of the most productive and economically important marine ecosystems9 may be seriously flawed. Here we present in situ estimates of copepod egg hatching success from twelve globally distributed areas, where diatoms dominate the phytoplankton assemblage. We did not observe a negative relationship between copepod egg hatching success and either diatom biomass or dominance in the microplankton in any of these regions. The classical model for diatom-dominated system remains valid.
DIATOMS, PHYTOPLANKTON, FOOD WEBS, EGGS, HATCHING, POPULATION DYNAMICS
0028-0836
387-389
Irigoien, X.
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Pond, D.
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Davidson, R.
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Harris, R.P.
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Verheye, H.M.
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Joly, P.
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Runge, J.
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Starr, M.
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Campbell, R.
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Shreeve, R.
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Ward, P.
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Smith, A.N.
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Dam, H.G.
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Peterson, W.
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Tirelli, V.
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Koski, M.
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Smith, T.
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Harbour, D.
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Irigoien, X.
25aa155a-3d8c-4ea8-a7c4-7f7be79b5efa
Pond, D.
01df0dc6-df68-44bd-befa-ff73f550d45c
Davidson, R.
9f684474-a989-4d8c-988c-a42e3d19db25
Harris, R.P.
a507befb-c320-4af6-a48c-41ce48ca9e70
Verheye, H.M.
81d848a6-f011-4ef1-8193-cb746a0ce720
Joly, P.
e4d43c83-c1a7-4977-bbea-c5ed254cdbca
Runge, J.
4f198411-7ca5-459a-ada7-9f02e98e748e
Starr, M.
ef33aeb4-f156-4885-ae21-e60ef55f3a41
Campbell, R.
5bd0b46a-6b67-4b0b-8346-b89160239200
Shreeve, R.
63f04949-343d-496b-a63f-b237c5ba1df2
Ward, P.
be8f5e51-8144-43cf-8c11-e0c7cf87b86c
Smith, A.N.
b4f6072f-24d0-4302-98fd-f135c0e5790e
Dam, H.G.
aa069cfb-746c-4b8c-b87f-60de44b2b413
Peterson, W.
0d401e12-7452-44d8-8aab-10d6e26c36d1
Tirelli, V.
2a5f9ab0-8f92-44e8-bbb6-04177ef2ce5d
Koski, M.
c7941ddb-1353-43ce-91ca-fdbb4285a256
Smith, T.
8af789d2-e097-40af-9632-514501c3c2f1
Harbour, D.
ad42487b-7691-4cd6-9910-9e6167a28e81

Irigoien, X., Pond, D., Davidson, R., Harris, R.P., Verheye, H.M., Joly, P., Runge, J., Starr, M., Campbell, R., Shreeve, R., Ward, P., Smith, A.N., Dam, H.G., Peterson, W., Tirelli, V., Koski, M., Smith, T. and Harbour, D. (2002) Copepod hatching success in marine ecosystems with high diatom concentrations. Nature, 419 (6905), 387-389. (doi:10.1038/nature01055).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Diatoms dominate spring bloom phytoplankton assemblages in temperate waters and coastal upwelling regions of the global ocean. Copepods usually dominate the zooplankton in these regions and are the prey of many larval fish species. Recent laboratory studies suggest that diatoms may have a deleterious effect on the success of copepod egg hatching. These findings challenge the classical view of marine food-web energy flow from diatoms to fish by means of copepods. Egg mortality is an important factor in copepod population dynamics, thus, if diatoms have a deleterious in situ effect, paradoxically, high diatom abundance could limit secondary production. Therefore, the current understanding of energy transfer from primary production to fisheries in some of the most productive and economically important marine ecosystems9 may be seriously flawed. Here we present in situ estimates of copepod egg hatching success from twelve globally distributed areas, where diatoms dominate the phytoplankton assemblage. We did not observe a negative relationship between copepod egg hatching success and either diatom biomass or dominance in the microplankton in any of these regions. The classical model for diatom-dominated system remains valid.

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Published date: 2002
Keywords: DIATOMS, PHYTOPLANKTON, FOOD WEBS, EGGS, HATCHING, POPULATION DYNAMICS

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 5985
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/5985
ISSN: 0028-0836
PURE UUID: 56225514-c7d4-4b2f-b091-4f0dd1dfbba3

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Date deposited: 10 Jun 2004
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:46

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Contributors

Author: X. Irigoien
Author: D. Pond
Author: R. Davidson
Author: R.P. Harris
Author: H.M. Verheye
Author: P. Joly
Author: J. Runge
Author: M. Starr
Author: R. Campbell
Author: R. Shreeve
Author: P. Ward
Author: A.N. Smith
Author: H.G. Dam
Author: W. Peterson
Author: V. Tirelli
Author: M. Koski
Author: T. Smith
Author: D. Harbour

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