ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil Advance Access originally published online on December 6, 2007
ICES Journal of Marine Science: Journal du Conseil 2008 65(3):351-360; doi:10.1093/icesjms/fsm175
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This article appears in the following ICES Journal of Marine Science issue: 4th International Zooplankton Production Symposium: Human and Climate Forcing of Zooplankton Populations [View the issue table of contents]
Mesozooplankton grazing in the coastal Gulf of Alaska: Neocalanus spp. vs. other mesozooplankton
1 Department of Biology, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Hong Kong, and Atmospheric, Marine and Coastal Environment (AMCE) Program, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Hong Kong
2 Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium, Chauvin, LA 70344, USA
3 NOAA Alaska Fisheries Science Center, Seattle, WA, USA
Correspondence to H. Liu: tel: +1 852 23587341; fax: +1 852 23581559; e-mail: liuhb{at}ust.hk
Liu, H., Dagg, J. M., Napp, J. M., and Sato, R. 2008. Mesozooplankton grazing in the coastal Gulf of Alaska: Neocalanus spp. vs. other mesozooplankton. – ICES Journal of Marine Science, 65: 351–360.Three species of large calanoid copepod, Neocalanus flemingeri, Neocalanus plumchrus, and Neocalanus cristatus, dominate the spring biomass of mesozooplankton in the Subarctic Pacific. We compared the grazing impact of Neocalanus species on phytoplankton with grazing by the remainder of the mesozooplankton community in the coastal and shelf waters of the Gulf of Alaska during spring and summer 2003. Neocalanus spp. and other mesozooplankton fed mainly on particles >20 µm, and phytoplankton in the smaller size-fractions (<20 µm) increased in the presence of mesozooplankton, possibly because of a trophic cascade resulting from mesozooplankton consumption of microzooplankton. Neocalanus spp. accounted for most of the mesozooplankton biomass and herbivory in the shelf water of the Gulf of Alaska and in the Prince William Sound (PWS) during April/May. The biomass of other mesozooplankton (mostly small copepods) varied seasonally and spatially; it did not increase in summer after the descent of Neocalanus spp. from the surface layer. On the basis of the clearance rates obtained from our experiments, in spring, grazing by Neocalanus spp. and the remaining mesozooplankton consumed
10% of daily growth of phytoplankton >20 µm in the outer-shelf region, where chlorophyll a concentrations were <0.5 mg m–3, and in PWS. Mesozooplankton consumed a smaller percentage of the >20 µm daily phytoplankton production in the inner- and mid-shelf regions where chlorophyll a concentrations were typically >5 mg m–3 with blooms of large diatoms. In summer, without Neocalanus spp. in the surface layer, mesozooplankton grazing accounted for a very small proportion of phytoplankton production across the whole shelf.
Keywords: grazing, Gulf of Alaska, mesozooplankton, Neocalanus, phytoplankton
Received 22 June 2007; accepted 6 October 2007; advance access publication 6 December 2007.