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Vertical distribution, standing stocks, and taxonomic accounts of the entire plankton community, and the estimation of vertical material flux via faecal pellets in the southern Okhotsk Sea

Authors :
Kojima, Daiki
Hamao, Yusuke
Amei, Kanako
Fukai, Yutaka
1000090712159
Matsuno, Kohei
1000040538279
Mitani, Yoko
1000050344495
Yamaguchi, Atsushi
Kojima, Daiki
Hamao, Yusuke
Amei, Kanako
Fukai, Yutaka
1000090712159
Matsuno, Kohei
1000040538279
Mitani, Yoko
1000050344495
Yamaguchi, Atsushi
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The faecal pellets egested by zooplankton are essential as they influence the vertical material flux in oceans. As mesozooplankton are dominant within the plankton community in the southern Okhotsk Sea during early summer, the vertical material flux via mesozooplankton is expected to be substantial. However, quantitative information on their faecal pellets is currently lacking. In this study, we evaluated the taxonomic accounts of the entire plankton community, including microplankton, mesozooplankton, and macrozooplankton, in the 0-1000 m water column. The ingestion and egestion rates of the zooplankton were also estimated. We used a fine-mesh (63 mu m) plankton net along with an imaging technique (with ZooScan) to quantify the amount of in-situ faecal pellets. Furthermore, on-board experiments were conducted to estimate the faecal pellet egestion by the dominant zooplankton species. Cosmopolitan diatom species were found to dominate the microplankton biomass, whereas the large-sized calanoid copepod Metridia okhotensis, which performs nocturnal ascent diel vertical migration, dominated the mesozooplankton biomass. Two euphausiid species with different body sizes, namely the small-sized Thysanoessa inermis and the large-sized Euphausia pacifica, were found to be dominant among the macrozooplankton. The highest density and mass of faecal pellets (1888 pellets m(-3), 2.96 mg C m(-3)) was observed in the 0-100 m layer during the daytime. Throughout the layer, the volumes of the faecal pellets peaked at 0.010-0.015 mm(3), which corresponded with the size of the pellets egested by M. okhotensis in the on-board laboratory experiments. The large-sized faecal pellets (> 0.2 mm(3)), which were inferred to be egested by euphausiids, were only observed during the night-time. Based on the on-board experiments, the faecal pellets egested by all the meso- and macrozooplankton species contained phytoplankton cells that possessed a fluo-rescent ability. Furthermore, cyanobacter

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1375180403
Document Type :
Electronic Resource