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  • Articles  (5,095)
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  • Oxford University Press  (5,095)
  • Institute of Physics
  • Journal of Plankton Research  (626)
  • 3638
  • 11
    Publication Date: 2015-09-22
    Description: I explored mortality estimation for stage-structured populations, building on previous work that applied vertical life-table methods to populations of copepods. A new Bayesian approach for estimating mortality rates accounts for uncertainties in stage duration and number counted by stage, which have not been fully incorporated into previous analyses. This method assumes that mortality is similar among similar life stages. Results using simulated data show that realistic values of the standard deviation of stage duration and number of individuals counted result in reliable mortality estimates, though with wide confidence intervals. This uncertainty obscures variation in estimated mortality between successive stages and can also obscure bias due to violation of underlying assumptions such as that of a stable stage distribution. More importantly, the uncertainty calls into question many previous mortality estimates across pairs of life stages that do not account for these sources of uncertainty. The method was applied to an introduced population of the brackish-water cyclopoid copepod Limnoithona tetraspina in the San Francisco Estuary. Despite the uncertainties, results were interpretable: mortality was highest in nauplii and lowest in adults, probably because of high vulnerability of nauplii to invertebrate predators and low vulnerability of adults to fish predation.
    Print ISSN: 0142-7873
    Electronic ISSN: 1464-3774
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2015-09-22
    Description: The strong La Niña of 2010–2011 provided an opportunity to investigate the ecological impacts of El Niño-Southern Oscillation on coastal plankton communities using the nine national reference stations around Australia. Based on remote sensing and across the entire Australian region 2011 (La Niña) was only modestly different from 2010 (El Niño) with the average temperature declining 0.2%, surface chlorophyll a up 3% and modelled primary production down 14%. Other changes included a poleward shift in Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus . Along the east coast, there was a reduction in salinity, increase in nutrients, Chlorophytes and Prasinophytes (taxa with chlorophyll b , neoxanthin and prasinoxanthin). The southwest region had a rise in the proportion of 19-hexoyloxyfucoxanthin; possibly coccolithophorids in eddies of the Leeuwin Current and along the sub-tropical front. Pennate diatoms increased, Ceratium spp. decreased and Scrippsiella spp. increased in 2011. Zooplankton biomass declined significantly in 2011. There was a reduction in the abundance of Calocalanus pavo and Temora turbinata and increases in Clausocalanus farrani , Oncaea scottodicarloi and Macrosetella gracilis in 2011. The changes in the plankton community during the strong La Niña of 2011 suggest that this climatic oscillation exacerbates the tropicalization of Australia.
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2015-09-22
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2015-09-22
    Description: Jellyfish are effective predators on mesozooplankton and release large amounts of dissolved organic matter. Nevertheless, jellyfish initiated trophic cascades and bottom-up influences impacting lower trophic levels have received limited attention. We conducted a mesocosm experiment to quantify simultaneous top-down and bottom-up effects of a common jellyfish, Cyanea capillata , in a natural plankton community during autumn. Treatments were 0, 2 or 5 jellyfish per 2.5 m 3 mesocosm, four replicates each, with initial additions of inorganic nutrients. Primary and bacterial production, species abundance and composition of several trophic levels and nutrient and carbon dynamics were followed during the 8-day experiment. Multivariate statistics and generalized additive mixed modelling were applied to test whether jellyfish carbon concentration (0–1.26 mg jellyC L –1 ) in the mesocosms affected the variables monitored. Unexpected negligible predatory impact of jellyfish on mesozooplankton was observed, potentially related to jellyfish senescence. Community compositions of bacteria, phytoplankton and mesozooplankton changed with time, but did not differ between treatments. However, nutrient regeneration by jellyfish was evident, and jellyfish had a positive impact on total and specific bacterial production, total primary production and the 〉10 µm chlorophyll a fraction. Bottom-up influences from abundant jellyfish could thus stimulate productivity in nutrient depleted autumnal surface waters.
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2015-09-22
    Description: The feeding ecology of Blackfordia virginica was evaluated concurrently with their ecophysiological condition in a temperate estuary. The diet of B. virginica is composed not only of metazooplankton, as commonly observed for other jellyfish species, but also of phytoplankton, ciliates and detritus. This feeding behavior might explain their good nutritional condition and sustainable growth during bloom peaks, when zooplankton abundance has already decreased significantly.
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2015-09-22
    Description: The pelagic dynamics of the cosmopolitan scyphozoan Aurelia sp . was investigated in three French Mediterranean lagoons, Thau, Berre and Bages-Sigean, which harbour resident populations. The annual cycles showed a common univoltine pattern in all lagoons where the presence of pelagic stages in the water column lasted ~8 months. Field observations showed a release of ephyrae in winter time followed by pronounced growth between April and July, when individuals reached the largest sizes, before disappearing from the water column. Maximum abundance of ephyrae and medusae were registered in Thau. Medusae abundance attained a maximum of 331 ind 100 m –3 in Thau, 18 ind 100 m –3 in Berre and 7 ind 100 m –3 in Bages-Sigean lagoons. Temperature and zooplankton abundance appeared as leading factors of growth, where Bages-Sigean showed the population with higher growth rates (2.66 mm day –1 ) and maximum size (32 cm), followed by Thau (0.57–2.56 mm day –1 ; 22.4 cm) and Berre (1.57–2.22 mm day –1 ; 17 cm). The quantification of environmental windows used by the species showed wider ranges than previously reported in the Mediterranean Sea, which suggests a wide ecological plasticity of Aurelia spp. populations in north-western Mediterranean lagoons.
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2015-09-22
    Description: Two lobate ctenophores, Bolinopsis infundibulum and Mnemiopsis leidyi , occur in the North Sea. Stomach contents of field-collected B. infundibulum were recorded and clearance rates for cladocerans and copepods calculated. In starvation experiments, daily body carbon losses of 2.2 and 1.2% and total carbon content losses of 76 and 63% were observed for B. infundibulum (after 68 days) and M. leidyi (after 67 days), respectively.
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2015-09-22
    Description: The ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi is characterized by high growth rates and a large reproductive capacity. However, reproductive dynamics are not yet well understood. Here, we present laboratory data on food-dependent egg production in M. leidyi and egg hatching time and success. Further, we report on the reproduction of laboratory-reared and field-caught animals during starvation. Our results show that the half-saturation zooplankton prey concentration for egg production is reached at food levels of 12–23 µgC L –1 , which is below the average summer food concentration encountered in invaded areas of northern Europe. Furthermore, starved animals continue to produce eggs for up to 12 days after cessation of feeding with high overall hatching success of 65–90%. These life history traits allow M. leidyi to thrive and reproduce in environments with varying food conditions and give it a competitive advantage under unfavourable conditions. This may explain why recurrent population blooms are observed and sustained in localized areas in invaded northern Europe, where water exchange is limited and zooplankton food resources are quickly depleted by M. leidyi . We suggest that these reproductive life history traits are key to its invasion success.
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2015-09-22
    Description: Surface-dwelling colonies of Velella velella occur throughout tropical to cold-temperate oceans of the world and sometimes are stranded in masses along hundreds of kilometers of beaches. Large-scale blooms in the Western Mediterranean Sea in 2013 and 2014 allowed the study of diet, prey digestion times and predation rates. Gastrozooid content analyses showed that 59% of the 769 identified prey were euphausiid larvae (calytopsis and furcilia) captured at night. Copepods (41%), fish eggs (2.2%) and larvae (0.5%) were captured both at day and night. Digestion times at ambient temperature (~17°C) of calytopsis, furcilia and copepods were estimated to be 〉6.5, 4.4 and 3.9 h, respectively. Estimated prey consumption was substantially lower in 2014 than in 2013 (41 vs. 75 prey day –1 colony –1 ). Velella velella and other gelatinous species bloomed in the Mediterranean Sea and the northeastern Atlantic and Pacific oceans in 2013 and 2014. Because of the wide distribution of V. velella colonies, their mass occurrences, potential importance as predators and competitors of fish, additional production from symbiotic zooxanthellae and stranding on beaches, they could be important in open-ocean carbon cycling and in transport of pelagic production to landmasses.
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2015-05-24
    Description: Several hypotheses exist that describe phytoplankton spring blooms in temperate and subpolar oceans: the critical depth, shoaling mixed layer (ML), critical turbulence, onset of stratification and disturbance-recovery hypotheses. These theories appear to be mutually exclusive and none of them describe the annual cycle of phytoplankton biomass. Here, we present a model of the annual cycle in phytoplankton that recognizes that phytoplankton are not always mixed throughout the so-called ML, and that it is important to distinguish between the surface biomass and depth-integrated phytoplankton. Once these important distinctions are made, the annual cycles and blooms in surface and depth-integrated phytoplankton can be described straightforwardly in terms of the physical drivers and biotic responses.
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