Food web interactions in the plankton of Long Island bays, with preliminary observations on brown tide effects

被引:77
作者
Lonsdale, DJ
Cosper, EM
Kim, WS
Doall, M
Divadeenam, A
Jonasdottir, SH
机构
[1] Marine Sciences Research Center, State Univ. New York at Stony Brook, Stony Brook
[2] Korean Ocean R. and D. Institute, Seoul 425-600
[3] Danish Inst. for Fish. and Mar. Res., DK-2920 Charlottenlund, Charlottenlund Castle
关键词
zooplankton grazing and production; primary production; ciliates;
D O I
10.3354/meps134247
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
We examined the relative importance of phytoplankton and ciliates as prey for metazoan zooplankton, and the role of predation in regulating ciliate populations in 2 Long Island (USA) bays. Depth-integrated primary production (mg C m(-2) h(-1)) was dominated by nannoplankton < 5 mu m in diameter throughout the year, ranging from > 95% of total production in mid-summer to an average of about 60% in winter and early spring. Predator exclusion and addition experiments conducted in microcosms showed that the mortality coefficient of ciliates (d(-1)) from zooplankton predation was higher when larger phytoplankton (> 10 mu m) contributed less to total primary productivity. For adult copepods, an increase in the percentage ciliate contribution compared to phytoplankton contribution to total carbon intake also coincided with the higher percentages of small microalgal production. Egg production rates of Acartia spp. were positively correlated to the net growth coefficient of ciliates. In contrast, micrometazoa routinely obtained > 70% of their total carbon ration from phytoplankton, and at times during spring and summer, removed 23 to 52% of the total depth-integrated primary production. In addition to protozoa, we suggest that micrometazoa, particularly copepod nauplii, may serve as a trophic link between phytoplankton and mesozooplankton in Long Island bays.
引用
收藏
页码:247 / 263
页数:17
相关论文
共 68 条
[1]  
ANDERSON DM, 1989, LECT NOTES COASTAL E, P213
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1981, Statistical Tables
[3]   THE ECOLOGICAL ROLE OF WATER-COLUMN MICROBES IN THE SEA [J].
AZAM, F ;
FENCHEL, T ;
FIELD, JG ;
GRAY, JS ;
MEYERREIL, LA ;
THINGSTAD, F .
MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 1983, 10 (03) :257-263
[4]  
BEERS JR, 1966, LIMNOL OCEANOGR, V11, P520
[5]   PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY AND PHYTOPLANKTON SIZE FRACTION DOMINANCE IN A TEMPERATE NORTH-ATLANTIC ESTUARY [J].
BRUNO, SF ;
STAKER, RD ;
SHARMA, GM ;
TURNER, JT .
ESTUARIES, 1983, 6 (03) :200-211
[6]   GRAZING BY 35 TO 202 MU-M MICRO-ZOOPLANKTON IN LONG-ISLAND SOUND [J].
CAPRIULO, GM ;
CARPENTER, EJ .
MARINE BIOLOGY, 1980, 56 (04) :319-326
[7]  
CARON DA, 1989, LECTURE NOTES COASTA, P265
[8]  
Carpenter E.J., 1991, P33
[9]   REGULATION OF LAKE PRIMARY PRODUCTIVITY BY FOOD WEB STRUCTURE [J].
CARPENTER, SR ;
KITCHELL, JF ;
HODGSON, JR ;
COCHRAN, PA ;
ELSER, JJ ;
ELSER, MM ;
LODGE, DM ;
KRETCHMER, D ;
HE, X ;
VONENDE, CN .
ECOLOGY, 1987, 68 (06) :1863-1876
[10]  
CONOVER RJ, 1982, ANN I OCEANOGR PARIS, V58, P31