Zooplankton Spatial and Temporal Dynamics, Community Composition and Bentho-pelagic Coupling in Comau Fjord, Northern Chilean Patagonia

Zooplankton Spatial and Temporal Dynamics, Community Composition and Bentho-pelagic Coupling in Comau Fjord, Northern Chilean Patagonia PDF Author: Nur Garcia Herrera
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 0

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Book Description
Zooplankton are key players in the functioning of the marine pelagic food web of high latitude ecosystems as they constitute an essential link between primary producers and higher consumers. In addition, zooplankton provide food for benthic invertebrates, such as cold-water corals. The steep walls of Comau Fjord, northern Chilean Patagonia, harbor a diverse and rich benthic community, including dense aggregations of cold-water corals that thrive even in adverse conditions such as aragonite-depleted waters. This paradox has been attributed to a rich food supply, zooplankton being the main diet of the corals. However, the information on zooplankton seasonal and vertical distribution, together with its community composition, is still very fragmentary in Patagonian waters. Furthermore, abiotic and biotic drivers influencing the zooplankton dynamics under seasonal environmental variations (e.g. changes in solar radiation and rainfall) and their potential linkage to the corals in Comau Fjord are so far unknown. The aim of this thesis is to identify the drivers governing the zooplankton dynamics in Comau Fjord, and to understand the role of zooplankton in the bentho-pelagic coupling. To achieve this objective, the zooplankton distribution and composition were investigated both spatially and temporally. Stratified vertical hauls from surface waters to near the seabed were carried out both seasonally and during day and night by a closing Nansen net at different locations in the fjord. Subsequently, zooplankton samples were scanned with state-of-art digital imaging system (ZooScan), and zooplankton abundance, biovolume and biomass were determined for 41 zooplankton and 11 meroplankton taxa out of a total of 163,840 vignettes identified in EcoTaxa. The zooplankton availability was used to estimate spatial and temporal differences in food availability for benthic coral communities and were further compared to measured trophic markers in corals from different coral populations along the fjord. The zooplankton distribution in Comau Fjord showed a pronounce seasonality (chapter 2). Its abundance peaked in austral spring, suggesting a close link between zooplankton reproduction and phytoplankton spring bloom. However, zooplankton biomass was the highest in summer and lowest in winter, indicating that during the warmer season, bigger individuals or larger taxa developed and during the cold season the low primary production was not enough to support a high zooplankton growth. Higher zooplankton biovolume were observed in the outer part of Comau Fjord compared to the central-inner fjord and could clearly be associated with a higher chlorophyll a concentration at the fjord mouth (chapter 3). Throughout the year and along the horizontal transect, zooplankton abundance was concentrated in surface waters, while highest biovolumes were found in intermediate waters during daytime, and in surface layers during nighttime, indicating the diel vertical migration of large zooplankton (chapter 2 and 3). The community composition of zooplankton in Comau Fjord was mainly dominated by copepods, both in abundance and biovolume, followed by chaetognaths, mysids, cnidarians, and amphipods (in terms of biovolume) and meroplankton, appendicularians and ostracods (in terms of abundance) (chapter 2 and 3). Meroplankton, defined as planktonic life stages of benthic organisms, have an important role in the bentho-pelagic coupling of marine ecosystems. Meroplankton abundance concentrated in the upper 50 m of the water column (chapter 4), and was highest in spring, coinciding with higher chlorophyll a and oxygen concentrations, suggesting a close coupling between macrobenthos reproduction and meroplankton feeding with the phytoplankton spring bloom. The dominance of the different meroplankton taxa shifted seasonally, being echinoderms the most abundant in spring, gastropods in summer and autumn, and bryozoans in winter. The fatty acid composition of corals from both shallow and deep water sites revealed strong differences in their main food source (chapter 5). In shallow, fatty acid markers indicated a phytoplankton-based (dominated by diatom) diet with contribution of small copepods, while corals from the deep sites showed a dominance of calanoid copepod-related markers that may explain the higher energy stores in deep corals. However, this is not reflected by the low zooplankton assessment (chapter 2 and 3). This discrepancy may derive from ecological differences at the two different depths as well as methodological issues, both discussed in this thesis. Overall, this thesis provides novel insights into (a) the zooplankton community composition in Chilean Patagonian waters, mainly dominated by copepods, with an unprecedented level of spatial and temporal detail; (b) the main drivers governing the zooplankton dynamics, such as water column stratification, estuarine circulation or diel vertical migration; and (c) how the strong seasonal environmental variations of Comau Fjord affect not only the pelagic system (holo- and meroplankton), especially in the highly variable surface waters, but also the coral communities that populate the fjord. Furthermore, this thesis highlights the importance of zooplankton as an essential food supply to opportunistic benthic invertebrates that seasonally need to adapt to the high variations in zooplankton distribution and affect their trophic ecology. Additionally, the data clearly underscores the information gain through regular monitoring of pelagic communities in coastal ecosystems that allow to assess the natural extent of bentho-pelagic coupling as well as how anthropogenic perturbations may impact the functioning of the marine food web.

Zooplankton Spatial and Temporal Dynamics, Community Composition and Bentho-pelagic Coupling in Comau Fjord, Northern Chilean Patagonia

Zooplankton Spatial and Temporal Dynamics, Community Composition and Bentho-pelagic Coupling in Comau Fjord, Northern Chilean Patagonia PDF Author: Nur Garcia Herrera
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 0

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Book Description
Zooplankton are key players in the functioning of the marine pelagic food web of high latitude ecosystems as they constitute an essential link between primary producers and higher consumers. In addition, zooplankton provide food for benthic invertebrates, such as cold-water corals. The steep walls of Comau Fjord, northern Chilean Patagonia, harbor a diverse and rich benthic community, including dense aggregations of cold-water corals that thrive even in adverse conditions such as aragonite-depleted waters. This paradox has been attributed to a rich food supply, zooplankton being the main diet of the corals. However, the information on zooplankton seasonal and vertical distribution, together with its community composition, is still very fragmentary in Patagonian waters. Furthermore, abiotic and biotic drivers influencing the zooplankton dynamics under seasonal environmental variations (e.g. changes in solar radiation and rainfall) and their potential linkage to the corals in Comau Fjord are so far unknown. The aim of this thesis is to identify the drivers governing the zooplankton dynamics in Comau Fjord, and to understand the role of zooplankton in the bentho-pelagic coupling. To achieve this objective, the zooplankton distribution and composition were investigated both spatially and temporally. Stratified vertical hauls from surface waters to near the seabed were carried out both seasonally and during day and night by a closing Nansen net at different locations in the fjord. Subsequently, zooplankton samples were scanned with state-of-art digital imaging system (ZooScan), and zooplankton abundance, biovolume and biomass were determined for 41 zooplankton and 11 meroplankton taxa out of a total of 163,840 vignettes identified in EcoTaxa. The zooplankton availability was used to estimate spatial and temporal differences in food availability for benthic coral communities and were further compared to measured trophic markers in corals from different coral populations along the fjord. The zooplankton distribution in Comau Fjord showed a pronounce seasonality (chapter 2). Its abundance peaked in austral spring, suggesting a close link between zooplankton reproduction and phytoplankton spring bloom. However, zooplankton biomass was the highest in summer and lowest in winter, indicating that during the warmer season, bigger individuals or larger taxa developed and during the cold season the low primary production was not enough to support a high zooplankton growth. Higher zooplankton biovolume were observed in the outer part of Comau Fjord compared to the central-inner fjord and could clearly be associated with a higher chlorophyll a concentration at the fjord mouth (chapter 3). Throughout the year and along the horizontal transect, zooplankton abundance was concentrated in surface waters, while highest biovolumes were found in intermediate waters during daytime, and in surface layers during nighttime, indicating the diel vertical migration of large zooplankton (chapter 2 and 3). The community composition of zooplankton in Comau Fjord was mainly dominated by copepods, both in abundance and biovolume, followed by chaetognaths, mysids, cnidarians, and amphipods (in terms of biovolume) and meroplankton, appendicularians and ostracods (in terms of abundance) (chapter 2 and 3). Meroplankton, defined as planktonic life stages of benthic organisms, have an important role in the bentho-pelagic coupling of marine ecosystems. Meroplankton abundance concentrated in the upper 50 m of the water column (chapter 4), and was highest in spring, coinciding with higher chlorophyll a and oxygen concentrations, suggesting a close coupling between macrobenthos reproduction and meroplankton feeding with the phytoplankton spring bloom. The dominance of the different meroplankton taxa shifted seasonally, being echinoderms the most abundant in spring, gastropods in summer and autumn, and bryozoans in winter. The fatty acid composition of corals from both shallow and deep water sites revealed strong differences in their main food source (chapter 5). In shallow, fatty acid markers indicated a phytoplankton-based (dominated by diatom) diet with contribution of small copepods, while corals from the deep sites showed a dominance of calanoid copepod-related markers that may explain the higher energy stores in deep corals. However, this is not reflected by the low zooplankton assessment (chapter 2 and 3). This discrepancy may derive from ecological differences at the two different depths as well as methodological issues, both discussed in this thesis. Overall, this thesis provides novel insights into (a) the zooplankton community composition in Chilean Patagonian waters, mainly dominated by copepods, with an unprecedented level of spatial and temporal detail; (b) the main drivers governing the zooplankton dynamics, such as water column stratification, estuarine circulation or diel vertical migration; and (c) how the strong seasonal environmental variations of Comau Fjord affect not only the pelagic system (holo- and meroplankton), especially in the highly variable surface waters, but also the coral communities that populate the fjord. Furthermore, this thesis highlights the importance of zooplankton as an essential food supply to opportunistic benthic invertebrates that seasonally need to adapt to the high variations in zooplankton distribution and affect their trophic ecology. Additionally, the data clearly underscores the information gain through regular monitoring of pelagic communities in coastal ecosystems that allow to assess the natural extent of bentho-pelagic coupling as well as how anthropogenic perturbations may impact the functioning of the marine food web.

Zooplankton Diversity and Pelagic Food Webs

Zooplankton Diversity and Pelagic Food Webs PDF Author: Marina Manca
Publisher: MDPI
ISBN: 3039435493
Category : Science
Languages : en
Pages : 226

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Book Description
Zooplankton are of key importance in the structure and functioning of aquatic food webs. They contribute to a large part of the functional and structural biodiversity of predator and prey plankton communities. Promptly responding to long-term and seasonal changes in the physical and chemical environment, they are sensitive indicators of patterns and mechanisms of impact drivers, both natural and human induced. In this volume, we aim to present evidence for both long-term and seasonal changes in zooplankton community structure and dynamics, investigating different approaches from population dynamics to advanced molecular techniques and reconstructing past communities from subfossil remains in lake sediments.

Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Zooplankton Communities in Freshwater Systems

Spatial and Temporal Heterogeneity of Zooplankton Communities in Freshwater Systems PDF Author: Conor Helene Mines
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 138

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Book Description
[Truncated abstract] Heterogeneity within aquatic ecosystems influences many vital ecosystem processes, and as such its investigation is fundamental to understanding ecological interactions within planktonic systems. Teasing apart the layers of heterogeneity within any environment is, however, hindered by the problem of pattern and scale, and the absence of a single natural scale (spatial or temporal) that may be applied to the study of environmental phenomena. This is particularly true within the study of freshwater zooplankton communities, having been historically restricted by the available sampling technology which has allowed only for a traditional 'snapshot' approach to data collection. Attempts to quantitatively measure zooplankton heterogeneity and the associated driving forces have therefore been limited by a lack of simultaneous high-resolution observations of zooplankton in combination with abiotic and biotic driver metrics. The research presented here relates to the application of new technologies to address this old problem. Specifically, a Laser Optical Plankton Counter (LOPC) is used to measure zooplankton in situ and at high resolution, allowing a rapid and extensive assessment of the distribution, abundance and community structure of planktonic organisms and the processes underlying their distribution. Zooplankton dynamics are examined from three separate but interconnected perspectives firstly from a methodological perspective in which some common emerging techniques are questioned and sources of measurement error are explored; before the LOPC is deployed in situ in Harp Lake (Muskoka, Ontario, Canada) to allow the examination of spatial zooplankton distribution dynamics over multiple study times and with varying wind regimes; and finally through exploring long-term temporal dynamics in zooplankton community size structure within Harp Lake, in the context of biological invasion by Bythotrephes longimanus, by processing historical zooplankton samples with the LOPC in a laboratory setting. From a methodological perspective it was found that although particle abundance values within the 130 U+006fm equivalent spherical diameter (ESD) size range were erroneously inflated by non-zooplankton particles such as algal aggregates, biomass values calculated from LOPC-measured particles may be assumed to be attributable to detected zooplankton. There does, however, remain uncertainty regarding the contribution of non-zooplankton particles to the

Zooplankton Community Analysis

Zooplankton Community Analysis PDF Author: W.M. Jr. Lewis
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
ISBN: 1461299861
Category : Science
Languages : en
Pages : 171

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Book Description
This book is based on the premise that the study of ecological communities should be a composite analysis of system properties (community structure, community energetics) and population properties (life history patterns, adaptive strategies) backed by a thorough understanding of the physical chemical environment. Too frequently community ecology takes a much narrower focus. This may partly be the result of perceived antagonisms between schools of thought in ecology. Despite their rather separate origins, the multiple theoretical and methodological tools that now exist must be applied synthetically to real communities if the progress of the past two decades is to continue into the next two. This book has a case history format, which increases the opportunity for detailed analysis, although I have attempted to maintain the general per spective of a community ecologist and to draw extensively from the literature whenever it seems profitable to do so. The case history data are for Lake Lanao, a large tropical lake. The main zooplankton data base used in the analysis is entirely original and unpublished, although the detailed support ing data on the physical-chemical environment and the phytoplankton com munity have been presented in numerous journal articles and are thus abstracted or used selectively to meet the needs of zooplankton community analysis.

Zooplankton Diversity and Pelagic Food Webs

Zooplankton Diversity and Pelagic Food Webs PDF Author: Roberta Piscia
Publisher:
ISBN: 9783039435500
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 226

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Book Description
Zooplankton are of key importance in the structure and functioning of aquatic food webs. They contribute to a large part of the functional and structural biodiversity of predator and prey plankton communities. Promptly responding to long-term and seasonal changes in the physical and chemical environment, they are sensitive indicators of patterns and mechanisms of impact drivers, both natural and human induced. In this volume, we aim to present evidence for both long-term and seasonal changes in zooplankton community structure and dynamics, investigating different approaches from population dynamics to advanced molecular techniques and reconstructing past communities from subfossil remains in lake sediments.

Crustacean Zooplankton Communities in Chilean Inland Waters

Crustacean Zooplankton Communities in Chilean Inland Waters PDF Author: Patricio R, De los Rios-Escalante
Publisher: BRILL
ISBN: 9047428064
Category : Science
Languages : en
Pages : 117

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Book Description
The crustacean zooplankton of Chilean inland waters has been studied mainly in large Patagonian lakes, while that plankton in other Chilean water bodies has as yet been insufficiently investigated. The species actually reported upon herein require revision as regards their taxonomy and biogeography. On the basis of studies in the Patagonian lakes, oligotrophy has been determined as the main factor regulating zooplankton assemblages, whereas in southern shallow ponds the main regulating factors are oligotrophy and conductivity combined. No detailed studies for other Chilean water bodies are available to date. This book provides a checklist with updated information of the species of crustacean zooplankton in Chilean inland waters, while the results of an ecological study offer data for understanding the distribution and abundance of those faunal elements in the area.

Spatial patterns of zooplankton community composition and satellite measured surface temperature

Spatial patterns of zooplankton community composition and satellite measured surface temperature PDF Author: A.C. THOMAS
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages :

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Book Description


Spatial and Seasonal Variation in Free-living and Zooplankton-associated Microbial Communities of Alpine Lakes

Spatial and Seasonal Variation in Free-living and Zooplankton-associated Microbial Communities of Alpine Lakes PDF Author: Madeline Grace Perreault
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 0

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Book Description
Microbes contribute to aquatic ecosystem functioning and fitness of macroscopic organisms such as freshwater zooplankton. Many factors affect the taxonomic compositions of zooplankton-associated and free-living microbial communities in lakes, yet how these communities change seasonally in lakes remains poorly understood. In this study, we investigate how free-living microbial communities and those associated with different zooplankton host species change in response to fluctuations in their natural environment across time and space. We repeatedly sampled zooplankton and water from six lakes in the eastern Sierra Nevada mountains of California, USA across a summer season. Analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequencing found marginal differences in the compositions of the free-living and zooplankton-associated microbial communities; however, they shared the same dominant classes of bacteria suggesting that horizontal transmission is a main mechanism driving the assembly of freshwater zooplankton microbiomes. The free-living and zooplankton-associated microbial communities significantly changed across the five sampling time points. Out of all measured environmental variables, lake temperature and dissolved organic carbon concentrations were the strongest predictors of microbial community composition. We did not find significant differences in the microbial communities across the six lakes, despite geographical separation, as well as differences in elevation, environmental conditions, and zooplankton community composition. Our results suggest that temporal variation plays a stronger role than spatial variation in shaping zooplankton-associated and free-living microbial communities of alpine lakes.

THE EFFECTS OF ZOOPLANKTON DISPERSAL ON COMMUNITY ASSEMBLY OF TEMPORARY PONDS.

THE EFFECTS OF ZOOPLANKTON DISPERSAL ON COMMUNITY ASSEMBLY OF TEMPORARY PONDS. PDF Author: Lauren C McCarthy
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 121

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Book Description
The dispersal of individuals among habitat patches is thought to have an important effect on ecological communities as it can influence both population dynamics and community assembly. Though much work on dispersal has been completed, zooplankton offer an interesting opportunity to study dispersal. They can disperse not only among ponds, but they can also disperse within and among ponds through time as their eggs can remain dormant for long periods until environmental conditions initiate their hatching. The dissertation has focused on the role of temporal and spatial dispersal on the assembly of zooplankton communities, an assessment of whether predators weaken the effect of early dispersing zooplankton species on late dispersing zooplankton species through differences in zooplankton hatching phenology, and the effects of environment and space on temporary pond zooplankton communities in the Croatan National Forest, NC. Differences in spatial and temporal dispersal had a weak effect on the number of zooplankton species present. Nonetheless, both spatial and temporal dispersal strongly affected the total abundance and species composition of zooplankton present, but their effects were interdependent. When predation and the effects of zooplankton hatching phenology were considered predators and one zooplankton species that arrived early slowed the growth of the later arriving zooplankton species. Algal resources were not affected by predators, but were affected by the order of arrival of the different zooplankton species. Lastly, the role of environment and space on zooplankton temporary pond communities showed that spatial and environmental factors explained similar amounts of the variation in zooplankton composition in the Croatan National Forest, with environmental factors explaining more of the variation in the spring and summer than in the fall and winter. Together these results indicate that zooplankton composition in pond communities can be affected by interactions between spatial and temporal dispersal, the presence of predators and differences in hatching phenology, as well as by environmental factors such as temperature and spatial factors such as pond size and pond density. Thus, highlighting the importance of dispersal but also its interaction with other abiotic and biotic factors to form zooplankton communities.

Zooplankton Adaptations and Community Dynamics in Space and Time

Zooplankton Adaptations and Community Dynamics in Space and Time PDF Author: Katrin Kiemel
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category :
Languages : en
Pages : 0

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Book Description
In times of ongoing biodiversity loss, understanding how communities are structured and what mechanisms and local adaptations underlie the patterns we observe in nature is crucial for predicting how future ecological and anthropogenic changes might affect local and regional biodiversity. Aquatic zooplankton are a group of primary consumers that represent a critical link in the food chain, providing nutrients for the entire food web. Thus, understanding the adaptability and structure of zooplankton communities is essential. In this work, the genetic basis for the different temperature adaptations of two seasonally shifted (i.e., temperature-dependent) occurring freshwater rotifers of a formerly cryptic species complex (Brachionus calyciflorus) was investigated to understand the overall genetic diversity and evolutionary scenario for putative adaptations to different temperature regimes. Furthermore, this work aimed to clarify to what extent the different temperature adaptations may represent a niche partitioning process thus enabling co-existence. [...].