scholarly journals Winter Zooplankton in a Small Arctic Lake: Abundance and Vertical Distribution

Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (7) ◽  
pp. 912
Author(s):  
Vladimir G. Dvoretsky ◽  
Alexander G. Dvoretsky

Zooplankton assemblages are of great importance in aquatic food webs because they link lower (microplankton) and higher trophic levels (top predators). Small water bodies in the Arctic regions of Russia are less studied in winter because of severe ice conditions. For this reason, we analyzed the winter zooplankton community in Lake Kulonga (western coast of Kola Bay, Barents Sea). A total of 9 taxa were found in the samples. The total abundance varied from 200 to 1320 ind. m−3, averaging 705 ind. m−3. The total zooplankton biomass was 1.8–72.8 mg of wet mass m−3 with an average of 30 mg m−3. These parameters were lower than in other Russian Arctic and sub-arctic lakes in summer. Old copepodites of Cyclops spp. dominated the zooplankton community at deep-water stations in terms of the total abundance consisting of 24–33%. The copepod Macrocyclops albidus prevailed in terms of the total zooplankton biomass comprising 30–33% at deep-water stations while Cyclops scutifer and copepodites Cyclops spp. had the highest biomass at shallow water stations. Vertical distribution demonstrated different patterns at neighboring stations, probably as a result of differences in the density of fish predators.

2019 ◽  
Vol 76 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. i10-i23
Author(s):  
Irina P Prokopchuk ◽  
Alexander G Trofimov

Abstract Our research focused on the analysis of interannual variability of zooplankton in the Kola Section (the Barents Sea) in the period of current warming in the Arctic basing on previously unpublished data. The zooplankton community was investigated based on the analysis of 240 plankton samples, collected in late May–early June 2009–2017. A total of 74 zooplankton taxa of nine phyla were identified in the plankton samples, but copepods were the most diverse and numerous taxonomic group. The biodiversity index varied considerably from year to year, but a stable tendency for the index to increase since the beginning of the period studied was observed. Copepods dominated in terms of abundance and biomass, comprising on average 73–96% of the total zooplankton abundance and 81–96% of the total zooplankton biomass. Calanus finmarchicus was the main zooplankton species utterly dominated by abundance and biomass (on average 92 and 97% respectively). Considerable differences in zooplankton abundance and biomass at different stations of the section were observed. Although the investigations were carried out during a warming period, interannual differences in zooplankton abundance and biomass were observed. Zooplankton biomasses were higher in the years with higher temperatures and stronger water inflow.


1983 ◽  
Vol 40 (10) ◽  
pp. 1813-1819 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. S. Bays ◽  
T. L. Crisman

Zooplankton, including ciliated protozoans, were collected from 39 Florida lakes of widely ranging trophic state. Annual mean biomass values for different zooplankton groups were regressed against Carlson's Trophic State Index based on annual mean chlorophyll a concentration. Whereas total zooplankton biomass yielded a significant regression with increasing trophic state, microzooplankton (ciliates, rotifers, and nauplii) accounted for more of the relationship than macrozooplankton (cladocera, calanoids, and cyclopoids). Within the microzooplankton, the regression improved with decreasing body size. Macrozooplankton biomass exhibited a weak statistical relationship with lake trophic state, but the different component groups were variable in their response. The dominance within the zooplankton community shifts from macrozooplankton to microzooplankton with increasing trophic state, and the microzooplankton can constitute between 50 and 90% of the total zooplankton biomass in eutrophic lakes. Changes in zooplanktivore community structure with increasing trophic state show that whereas total fish biomass increases, dominance shifts from visually oriented predators, such as bass and bluegill, to pump filter-feeding planktivores, such as gizzard shad (Dorosoma cepedianum). While Florida zooplankton communities are similar in size structure to tropical communities, no statistically significant differences were found between empirical equations of crustacean zooplankton biomass and trophic state determined from temperate and Florida data bases.


1995 ◽  
Vol 30 (4) ◽  
pp. 673-692
Author(s):  
A.F. Gemza

Abstract The limnetic zooplankton of Severn Sound, a eutrophic embayment, were studied between 1978 and 1989. Forty-one species of zooplankton were identified from samples collected in the sound. Total zooplankton biomass ranged seasonally from a minimum of 3.9 mg/m3 at less eutrophic stations to over 1,625 mg/m3 at the most eutrophic sites. Annual means ranged from 38 to 373 mg/m3. At the most eutrophic sites the zooplankton community was dominated by the cladoceran Bosmina longirostris. Cyclopoid and calanoid copepods increased in dominance as conditions approached mesotrophy. Calanoid copepods were insignificant contributors at the eutrophic sites, averaging less than 3% of the total zooplankton biomass. Total zooplankton biomass declined with distance from shore and phosphorus point sources as conditions became less eutrophic. Significant empirical relationships (r>0.79) were measured between zooplankton biomass and total phosphorus and phytoplankton biovolume. Densities of several species, Eubosmina coregoni, Daphnia retrocurva and Diacyclops thomasi declined by over 50% during the 11-year period of study and may be related to a shift in fish community structure.


2012 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 357-367 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruna Roque Loureiro ◽  
Christina Wyss Castelo Branco ◽  
Evoy Zaniboni Filho

OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to verify the influence of net-cage fish farming on zooplankton biomass in the Itá reservoir (Uruguay River, Brazil). METHODS: Samples were collected monthly from October/2009 to May/2010 at the surface and at the bottom in two sampling stations, the net-cage area and in a control area using a Van Dorn bottle and a plankton net (68 µm). RESULTS: The Cladocera and Copepoda biomass was estimated by dry weight using a micro-analytical balance, and the Rotifera biomass by Biovolume. Total zooplankton biomass varied between 6.47 and 131.56 mgDW.m-3 Calanoida copepod presented the highest value of biomass (127.56 mgDW.m-3) and rotifers, despite having an important contribution to total density, showed a maximum biomass of 2.01 mgDW.m-3. Zooplankton biomass at the net-cage area surface was higher when compared with the control area during the months of October to January. However, the zooplankton biomass was similar at the bottom of the two areas throughout the studied period. From February until May, zooplankton biomass decreased in both sampling stations, a fact probably associated with the flushing of the reservoir, followed by an increase in water transparency and a decrease in chlorophyll-a concentration in the following months (February to May). CONCLUSIONS: The influence of fish farming on zooplankton biomass was detected at the surface of the net-cage area only from October to January. From February to May this influence was not found, probably by the influence of the flushing of the reservoir.


2017 ◽  
Vol 75 (7) ◽  
pp. 2342-2354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johanna Myrseth Aarflot ◽  
Hein Rune Skjoldal ◽  
Padmini Dalpadado ◽  
Mette Skern-Mauritzen

Abstract Copepods from the genus Calanus are crucial prey for fish, seabirds and mammals in the Nordic and Barents Sea ecosystems. The objective of this study is to determine the contribution of Calanus species to the mesozooplankton biomass in the Barents Sea. We analyse an extensive dataset of Calanus finmarchicus, Calanus glacialis, and Calanus hyperboreus, collected at various research surveys over a 30-year period. Our results show that the Calanus species are a main driver of variation in the mesozooplankton biomass in the Barents Sea, and constitutes around 80% of the total. The proportion of Calanus decreases at low zooplankton biomass, possibly due to a combination of advective processes (low C. finmarchicus in winter) and size selective foraging. Though the Calanus species co-occur in most regions, C. glacialis dominates in the Arctic water masses, while C. finmarchicus dominates in Atlantic waters. The larger C. hyperboreus has considerably lower biomass in the Barents Sea than the other Calanus species. Stages CIV and CV have the largest contribution to Calanus species biomass, whereas stages CI-CIII have an overall low impact on the biomass. In the western area of the Barents Sea, we observe indications of an ongoing borealization of the zooplankton community, with a decreasing proportion of the Arctic C. glacialis over the past 20 years. Atlantic C. finmarchicus have increased during the same period.


1993 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 215-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juliana H.M. Kouwenberg

Abundance of adult copepods and late copepodid stages from the upper 50 m in the Golfe du Lion (N.W. Mediterranean) was studied by the author in 1986, 1987, and 1988 for each season. Altogether 87 stations at 22 fixed locations were sampled in the frame of the multidisciplinary French/Spanish programme Pélagolion/Leopel in the near-coastal region (≤ 25 m bottom depth), the Rhone dilution zone, the neritic region (≤ 200 m bottom depth), and the oceanic region (200–2000 m bottom depth). Abundance of other zooplanktonic groups was estimated and total zooplankton biomass was determined for the upper 50 m. Copepod abundance was highest during September 1986 (all regions) and July 1987 (neritic). Total biomass was highest during July 1987 and May/June 1988, caused by high abundance of many other zooplankters.


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (5) ◽  
pp. 1411 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Calderó-Pascual ◽  
Elvira de Eyto ◽  
Eleanor Jennings ◽  
Mary Dillane ◽  
Mikkel René Andersen ◽  
...  

Between May and July 2018, Ireland experienced an exceptional heat wave, which broke long-term temperature and drought records. These calm, stable conditions were abruptly interrupted by a second extreme weather event, Atlantic Storm Hector, in late June. Using high-frequency monitoring data, coupled with fortnightly biological sampling, we show that the storm directly affected the stratification pattern of Lough Feeagh, resulting in an intense mixing event. The lake restabilised quickly after the storm as the heatwave continued. During the storm there was a three-fold reduction in Schmidt stability, with a mixed layer deepening of 9.5 m coinciding with a two-fold reduction in chlorophyll a but a three-fold increase in total zooplankton biomass. Epilimnetic respiration increased and net ecosystem productivity decreased. The ratio of total nitrogen:total phosphorus from in-lake versus inflow rivers was decoupled, leading to a cascade effect on higher trophic levels. A step change in nitrogen:phosphorus imbalances suggested that the zooplankton community shifted from phosphorus to nitrogen nutrient constraints. Such characterisations of both lake thermal and ecological responses to extreme weather events are relatively rare but are crucial to our understanding of how lakes are changing as the impacts of global climate change accelerate.


1977 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 443-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Berkes

From field data on growth and population numbers, production of Thysanoëssa raschii, excluding molts, was calculated to be about 1.8 mg dry wt∙m−3∙yr−1 in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The mean annual biomass of T. raschii was 0.47 mg dry wt∙m−3, comprising about 1% of the total zooplankton biomass in the Gulf, and giving a production to biomass (P:B) ratio of about 4. Production and biomass were probably underestimated due to some sampler avoidance, lack of egg to nauplius–metanauplius interval of population production and loss of weight due to leaching in preserved samples.


Author(s):  
N. John Anderson ◽  
Ole Bennike

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Anderson, N. J., & Bennike, O. (1997). Holocene lake sediments in West Greenland and their palaeoclimatic and palaeoecological implications. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 176, 89-94. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v176.5072 _______________ There is considerable interest both from social and environmental perspectives as to the possible effects of future climate changes. This interest, which focuses on the time scales and rates of change of future climatic variability, has led to an increased recognition of the importance of studies of palaeoclimates and their ecological impacts (Street-Perrot & Roberts, 1994). General circulation models (GCMs) suggest that the Arctic will be especially sensitive to increased atmospheric temperatures (the ‘greenhouse effect’). Such predictions or forecasts of future climatic scenarios are the primary role for GCMs in the debate about future global climate change (Henderson-Sellers, 1994), but it is also possible to use GCMs to model past-climate changes (Henderson-Sellers, 1990; Street-Perrot & Roberts, 1994). GCM hindcasts of past climate have the advantage that the predictions can be independently validated against palaeoclimate data derived from a variety of proxy sources, e.g. ice cores, peats, marine and lake sediments (Street-Perrot & Roberts, 1994; Anderson, 1995). Arctic lake sediments are an important natural archive of past changes in climate, but they also record the impact of these climatic changes on the local biota and environment (Smol et al., 1991). Lake sediment records can be used to provide the necessary baseline information against which future anthropogenic changes can be evaluated (Anderson, 1993). Such baseline conditions are often difficult to determine from contemporary data as the monitoring programmes are initiated after change has already occurred. Arctic lakes and their catchment areas have two other important aspects which make them ideally suited to detailed, quantitative palaeoecological and palaeoclimatic approaches: they have a relatively simple biological structure, and anthropogenic impacts on the catchment areas are so small they can be effectively discounted. Because the shallow lakes are often fishless, the effects of higher trophic levels (the trophic cascade) on the lower trophic levels (primary producers, e.g. algae and phototrophic bacteria) can also be discounted. This has the implication that the majority of the limnological changes recorded in the lake sediments represent climate-driven catchment-lake interactions. It is possible therefore, to evaluate the effect of past-climate changes, such as the Holocene thermal maximum, on the lake biota. Importantly, independent estimates of past-climate can be derived from GCMs or from the ice-core records (Johnsen et al., 1995). In contrast to most other regions of the globe that are experiencing increasing temperatures, West Greenland and the Baffin Bay region have seen decreasing temperatures during recent decades. Studies of lake sediments that are widespread in West Greenland can provide information about the temporal and spatial climatic variability since the last ice age.


2008 ◽  
Vol 65 (12) ◽  
pp. 2644-2655 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amy M. Kamarainen ◽  
Freya E. Rowland ◽  
Reinette Biggs ◽  
Stephen R. Carpenter

Zooplankton grazing is important in resolving residual variation around the total phosphorus – chlorophyll a relationship. In empirical studies, zooplankton body size is often a better predictor of residual variation than zooplankton biomass. We investigate whether higher measurement error associated with zooplankton biomass may explain its lower predictive ability. We collected five replicate zooplankton biomass samples in 19 lakes, allowing us to quantify measurement error in volumetric zooplankton biomass with greater precision than in previous studies. A hierarchical Bayesian model was used to assess the predictive ability of volumetric zooplankton biomass and mean individual zooplankton length, corrected for measurement error. We found consistent effects of total zooplankton biomass, but not zooplankton length, on chlorophyll a. This finding does not appear to be related to the higher precision with which total zooplankton biomass was measured in our study, but rather to ecological factors. Interlake variation outweighed the effects of measurement error in estimating the strength of relationships between zooplankton variables and chlorophyll a. Our findings therefore suggest that studies to estimate zooplankton effects on phytoplankton should allocate resources to study a larger range of lakes over different time periods than to process replicate samples to reduce measurement error.


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