Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Trophic sources and linkages to support mesozooplankton community in the Kuroshio of the East China Sea
View through CrossRef
AbstractMany migratory fishes reproduce and recruit around the Kuroshio, and their survival of early life stages is supported by mesozooplankton. Mesozooplankton standing stocks and productivity equivalent to those on the continental shelf have been found in the Kuroshio; however, there is limited information on trophic sources and linkages to support the mesozooplankton community. Here, we evaluate mesozooplankton feeding on protists and their trophodynamics importance by removal bottle experiments in the Kuroshio of the East China (ECS‐Kuroshio). Pico‐ and nano‐autotrophs dominated chlorophyll a concentrations throughout the study sites across the continental shelf, within the Kuroshio path and in adjacent waters. Calanoid and poecilostomatoid copepods comprised more than 85% of mesozooplankton biomass. Significant mesozooplankton ingestion rates were found for nano‐autotrophs based on size‐fractionated chlorophyll; for haptophytes, chrysophytes, chlorophytes, and diatoms from pigment‐based phytoplankton analysis; and for naked ciliates in the microzooplankton. Based on the estimates of individual carbon budgets, nano‐autotrophs and naked ciliates ingested by mesozooplankton composed 39% of their food requirements, suggesting other available prey like nano‐heterotrophs. These results imply that mesozooplankton ingestion in the ECS‐Kuroshio has great impacts on protozoan and phytoplankton communities and their major trophic pathways are from nano‐sized auto‐ and heterotrophs and ciliates to copepods.
Title: Trophic sources and linkages to support mesozooplankton community in the Kuroshio of the East China Sea
Description:
AbstractMany migratory fishes reproduce and recruit around the Kuroshio, and their survival of early life stages is supported by mesozooplankton.
Mesozooplankton standing stocks and productivity equivalent to those on the continental shelf have been found in the Kuroshio; however, there is limited information on trophic sources and linkages to support the mesozooplankton community.
Here, we evaluate mesozooplankton feeding on protists and their trophodynamics importance by removal bottle experiments in the Kuroshio of the East China (ECS‐Kuroshio).
Pico‐ and nano‐autotrophs dominated chlorophyll a concentrations throughout the study sites across the continental shelf, within the Kuroshio path and in adjacent waters.
Calanoid and poecilostomatoid copepods comprised more than 85% of mesozooplankton biomass.
Significant mesozooplankton ingestion rates were found for nano‐autotrophs based on size‐fractionated chlorophyll; for haptophytes, chrysophytes, chlorophytes, and diatoms from pigment‐based phytoplankton analysis; and for naked ciliates in the microzooplankton.
Based on the estimates of individual carbon budgets, nano‐autotrophs and naked ciliates ingested by mesozooplankton composed 39% of their food requirements, suggesting other available prey like nano‐heterotrophs.
These results imply that mesozooplankton ingestion in the ECS‐Kuroshio has great impacts on protozoan and phytoplankton communities and their major trophic pathways are from nano‐sized auto‐ and heterotrophs and ciliates to copepods.
Related Results
The influence of Typhoon “Hongxia” on the intrusion of the Kuroshio current into the South China Sea
The influence of Typhoon “Hongxia” on the intrusion of the Kuroshio current into the South China Sea
This paper uses the Coupled Ocean-Atmosphere-Wave-Sediment Transport
(COAWST) model to analyze the impact of typhoon “Hongxia” on the
velocity and position movement of the Kuroshio...
Spatial and temporal distribution of mesozooplankton in the coastal waters of Cyprus (Eastern Mediterranean)
Spatial and temporal distribution of mesozooplankton in the coastal waters of Cyprus (Eastern Mediterranean)
This study provides elements on the spatial and temporal mesozooplankton variability during a three-year study, encompassing vertical hauls from 50 m deep to the surface from four ...
Eddy‐Kuroshio Interactions: Local and Remote Effects
Eddy‐Kuroshio Interactions: Local and Remote Effects
AbstractQuasi‐geostrophic mesoscale eddies regularly impinge on the Kuroshio in the western North Pacific, but the processes underlying the evolution of these eddy‐Kuroshio interac...
Mean flow and variability in the Kuroshio Extension from Geosat altimetry data
Mean flow and variability in the Kuroshio Extension from Geosat altimetry data
Using altimeter data from the Geosat Exact Repeat Mission (ERM), we investigated the mean flow and temporal and spatial variations of the Kuroshio Extension in the region of 140°–1...
Trophic structure and a temporal shift in trophic diversity of mobile consumers in a subarctic estuary
Trophic structure and a temporal shift in trophic diversity of mobile consumers in a subarctic estuary
Abstract
Quantifying trophic relationships within and between species in terms of trophic position, ontogeny, and trophic diversity provides information on community-level ...
Dynamics of Mesozooplankton Assemblage in Relation to Environmental Factors in the Maryland Coastal Bays
Dynamics of Mesozooplankton Assemblage in Relation to Environmental Factors in the Maryland Coastal Bays
The mesozooplankton composition and dynamics in coastal lagoons of Maryland, mid-Atlantic region, USA have received little scientific attention despite the fact that the lagoons ha...
Eddy‐Kuroshio interaction processes revealed by mooring observations off Taiwan and Luzon
Eddy‐Kuroshio interaction processes revealed by mooring observations off Taiwan and Luzon
AbstractThe influence and fate of westward propagating eddies that impinge on the Kuroshio were observed with pressure sensor‐equipped inverted echo sounders (PIESs) deployed east ...
Downstream evolution of the Kuroshio's time‐varying transport and velocity structure
Downstream evolution of the Kuroshio's time‐varying transport and velocity structure
AbstractObservations from two companion field programs—Origins of the Kuroshio and Mindanao Current (OKMC) and Observations of Kuroshio Transport Variability (OKTV)—are used here t...

