ISSN:
1432-1793
Source:
Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
Topics:
Biology
Notes:
Abstract Short-term incubations in seawater containing H14CO3 - or 3H2O in place of the naturally predominant isotopes can yield highly radioactive preparations of living phytoplankton or zooplankton. Subsequent in situ incubation of these labelled organisms with the community from which they were taken results in the rapid transfer of radioisotope to those species which prey upon them. This technique has been employed to map a portion of a marine food web involving demersal zooplankton; experiments were conducted in summer and autumn on a coral reef and in a subtropical estuary. Similar results were obtained from these initial experiments at each study site during both seasons. Prey supplied as zooplankton (124 to 410 μm nominal diameter), which consisted mainly of Oithona oculata, was fed upon by zooplankton size classes ranging from 410 to 850 μm and containing amphipods, ostracods, cumaceans and polychaetes. In experiments employing labelled phytoplankton as prey a wide size spectrum was used (10 to 106 μm) in order to include representative samples of most of the available planktonic autotrophs as estimated by primary production measurements. In two separate experiments, only 7 out of 63 samples evidenced grazing of phytoplankton by demersal zooplankters. In contrast, labelled diatom auxospores, employed in one experiment as they constituted the most numerically abundant species in the water column, were found to be grazed upon in nearly half the samples examined.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00387051
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