Zooplankton Community Response to Seasonal Hypoxia: A Test of Three Hypotheses

Several hypotheses of how zooplankton communities respond to coastal hypoxia have been put forward in the literature over the past few decades. We explored three of those that are focused on how zooplankton composition or biomass is affected by seasonal hypoxia using data collected over two summers...

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Main Authors: Julie E. Keister, Amanda K. Winans, BethElLee Herrmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-01-01
Series:Diversity
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/12/1/21
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spelling doaj-1d50bdf881384ba0bc6b4528582f8c3e2020-11-25T02:20:25ZengMDPI AGDiversity1424-28182020-01-011212110.3390/d12010021d12010021Zooplankton Community Response to Seasonal Hypoxia: A Test of Three HypothesesJulie E. Keister0Amanda K. Winans1BethElLee Herrmann2School of Oceanography, University of Washington, Box 357940, Seattle, WA 98195, USASchool of Oceanography, University of Washington, Box 357940, Seattle, WA 98195, USASchool of Oceanography, University of Washington, Box 357940, Seattle, WA 98195, USASeveral hypotheses of how zooplankton communities respond to coastal hypoxia have been put forward in the literature over the past few decades. We explored three of those that are focused on how zooplankton composition or biomass is affected by seasonal hypoxia using data collected over two summers in Hood Canal, a seasonally-hypoxic sub-basin of Puget Sound, Washington. We conducted hydrographic profiles and zooplankton net tows at four stations, from a region in the south that annually experiences moderate hypoxia to a region in the north where oxygen remains above hypoxic levels. The specific hypotheses tested were that low oxygen leads to: (1) increased dominance of gelatinous relative to crustacean zooplankton, (2) increased dominance of cyclopoid copepods relative to calanoid copepods, and (3) overall decreased zooplankton abundance and biomass at hypoxic sites compared to where oxygen levels are high. Additionally, we examined whether the temporal stability of community structure was decreased by hypoxia. We found evidence of a shift toward more gelatinous zooplankton and lower total zooplankton abundance and biomass at hypoxic sites, but no clear increase in the dominance of cyclopoid relative to calanoid copepods. We also found the lowest variance in community structure at the most hypoxic site, in contrast to our prediction. Hypoxia can fundamentally alter marine ecosystems, but the impacts differ among systems.https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/12/1/21puget soundhood canaloxygencopepodsgelatinous zooplanktoncommunity structurecyclopoidscalanoidsdiversity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Julie E. Keister
Amanda K. Winans
BethElLee Herrmann
spellingShingle Julie E. Keister
Amanda K. Winans
BethElLee Herrmann
Zooplankton Community Response to Seasonal Hypoxia: A Test of Three Hypotheses
Diversity
puget sound
hood canal
oxygen
copepods
gelatinous zooplankton
community structure
cyclopoids
calanoids
diversity
author_facet Julie E. Keister
Amanda K. Winans
BethElLee Herrmann
author_sort Julie E. Keister
title Zooplankton Community Response to Seasonal Hypoxia: A Test of Three Hypotheses
title_short Zooplankton Community Response to Seasonal Hypoxia: A Test of Three Hypotheses
title_full Zooplankton Community Response to Seasonal Hypoxia: A Test of Three Hypotheses
title_fullStr Zooplankton Community Response to Seasonal Hypoxia: A Test of Three Hypotheses
title_full_unstemmed Zooplankton Community Response to Seasonal Hypoxia: A Test of Three Hypotheses
title_sort zooplankton community response to seasonal hypoxia: a test of three hypotheses
publisher MDPI AG
series Diversity
issn 1424-2818
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Several hypotheses of how zooplankton communities respond to coastal hypoxia have been put forward in the literature over the past few decades. We explored three of those that are focused on how zooplankton composition or biomass is affected by seasonal hypoxia using data collected over two summers in Hood Canal, a seasonally-hypoxic sub-basin of Puget Sound, Washington. We conducted hydrographic profiles and zooplankton net tows at four stations, from a region in the south that annually experiences moderate hypoxia to a region in the north where oxygen remains above hypoxic levels. The specific hypotheses tested were that low oxygen leads to: (1) increased dominance of gelatinous relative to crustacean zooplankton, (2) increased dominance of cyclopoid copepods relative to calanoid copepods, and (3) overall decreased zooplankton abundance and biomass at hypoxic sites compared to where oxygen levels are high. Additionally, we examined whether the temporal stability of community structure was decreased by hypoxia. We found evidence of a shift toward more gelatinous zooplankton and lower total zooplankton abundance and biomass at hypoxic sites, but no clear increase in the dominance of cyclopoid relative to calanoid copepods. We also found the lowest variance in community structure at the most hypoxic site, in contrast to our prediction. Hypoxia can fundamentally alter marine ecosystems, but the impacts differ among systems.
topic puget sound
hood canal
oxygen
copepods
gelatinous zooplankton
community structure
cyclopoids
calanoids
diversity
url https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/12/1/21
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AT amandakwinans zooplanktoncommunityresponsetoseasonalhypoxiaatestofthreehypotheses
AT bethelleeherrmann zooplanktoncommunityresponsetoseasonalhypoxiaatestofthreehypotheses
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