Seasonal dynamics of mesozooplankton biomass over a sub‐Arctic continental shelf

Abstract Mesozooplankton research in high latitude ecosystems tends to focus on different life stages of Calanus spp. due to its biomass dominance and trophic roles. However, a complex seasonal succession of abundant smaller mesozooplankton taxa suggests that the ecological functioning of the mesozo...

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Main Authors: Marc J. Silberberger, Paul E. Renaud, Ketil Eiane, Henning Reiss
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-07-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7681
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spelling doaj-636487799e864037be25fb76419b4bda2021-09-22T11:50:36ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582021-07-0111138713872910.1002/ece3.7681Seasonal dynamics of mesozooplankton biomass over a sub‐Arctic continental shelfMarc J. Silberberger0Paul E. Renaud1Ketil Eiane2Henning Reiss3Institute of Oceanology Polish Academy of Sciences Sopot PolandAkvaplan‐niva Fram Centre for Climate and the Environment Tromsø NorwayFaculty of Biosciences and Aquaculture Nord University Bodø NorwayFaculty of Biosciences and Aquaculture Nord University Bodø NorwayAbstract Mesozooplankton research in high latitude ecosystems tends to focus on different life stages of Calanus spp. due to its biomass dominance and trophic roles. However, a complex seasonal succession of abundant smaller mesozooplankton taxa suggests that the ecological functioning of the mesozooplankton communities is more complicated. We studied the year‐round taxon‐specific biomass measurements and size distributions of mesozooplankton on a sub‐Arctic continental shelf based on formalin preserved samples. Our results confirm that Calanus spp. dominate the mesozooplankton biomass (81%). We show that commonly used length–weight relationships underestimate Calanus biomass in autumn and winter, and accordingly, a strong seasonal bias was introduced in our understanding of sub‐Arctic plankton communities. We observed two periods with considerable contribution of meroplankton, the planktonic larvae of benthic invertebrates, to the mesozooplankton biomass: (a) Cirripedia nauplii accounted for 17% of total biomass close to the coast in early April and (b) meroplankton comprised up to 12.7% of total biomass in late July. Based on these results, we suggest that meroplankton may play an ecologically important role in addition to their role in dispersal of benthic species. We conclude that the seasonal succession of the biomass of small‐sized holoplankton and meroplankton, often obscured by patterns in the Calanus biomass, should receive more attention as these smaller individuals are likely an important functional component of the pelagic food web.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7681benthic invertebrate larvaefish larval dietlength–weight relationshipLofoten–Vesterålen regionmarine food websmeroplankton
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marc J. Silberberger
Paul E. Renaud
Ketil Eiane
Henning Reiss
spellingShingle Marc J. Silberberger
Paul E. Renaud
Ketil Eiane
Henning Reiss
Seasonal dynamics of mesozooplankton biomass over a sub‐Arctic continental shelf
Ecology and Evolution
benthic invertebrate larvae
fish larval diet
length–weight relationship
Lofoten–Vesterålen region
marine food webs
meroplankton
author_facet Marc J. Silberberger
Paul E. Renaud
Ketil Eiane
Henning Reiss
author_sort Marc J. Silberberger
title Seasonal dynamics of mesozooplankton biomass over a sub‐Arctic continental shelf
title_short Seasonal dynamics of mesozooplankton biomass over a sub‐Arctic continental shelf
title_full Seasonal dynamics of mesozooplankton biomass over a sub‐Arctic continental shelf
title_fullStr Seasonal dynamics of mesozooplankton biomass over a sub‐Arctic continental shelf
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal dynamics of mesozooplankton biomass over a sub‐Arctic continental shelf
title_sort seasonal dynamics of mesozooplankton biomass over a sub‐arctic continental shelf
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Mesozooplankton research in high latitude ecosystems tends to focus on different life stages of Calanus spp. due to its biomass dominance and trophic roles. However, a complex seasonal succession of abundant smaller mesozooplankton taxa suggests that the ecological functioning of the mesozooplankton communities is more complicated. We studied the year‐round taxon‐specific biomass measurements and size distributions of mesozooplankton on a sub‐Arctic continental shelf based on formalin preserved samples. Our results confirm that Calanus spp. dominate the mesozooplankton biomass (81%). We show that commonly used length–weight relationships underestimate Calanus biomass in autumn and winter, and accordingly, a strong seasonal bias was introduced in our understanding of sub‐Arctic plankton communities. We observed two periods with considerable contribution of meroplankton, the planktonic larvae of benthic invertebrates, to the mesozooplankton biomass: (a) Cirripedia nauplii accounted for 17% of total biomass close to the coast in early April and (b) meroplankton comprised up to 12.7% of total biomass in late July. Based on these results, we suggest that meroplankton may play an ecologically important role in addition to their role in dispersal of benthic species. We conclude that the seasonal succession of the biomass of small‐sized holoplankton and meroplankton, often obscured by patterns in the Calanus biomass, should receive more attention as these smaller individuals are likely an important functional component of the pelagic food web.
topic benthic invertebrate larvae
fish larval diet
length–weight relationship
Lofoten–Vesterålen region
marine food webs
meroplankton
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.7681
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