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Mesozooplankton biomass and grazing in the Costa Rica Dome: amplifying variability through the plankton food web
Author(s) -
Moira Décima,
Michael R. Landry,
Michael R. Stukel,
Lucía LópezLópez,
Jeffrey W. Krause
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
journal of plankton research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.87
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1464-3774
pISSN - 0142-7873
DOI - 10.1093/plankt/fbv091
Subject(s) - plankton , grazing , food web , biomass (ecology) , dome (geology) , microbial food web , oceanography , environmental science , biology , ecology , geography , fishery , trophic level , geology , paleontology
We investigated standing stocks and grazing rates of mesozooplankton assemblages in the Costa Rica Dome (CRD), an open-ocean upwelling ecosystem in the eastern tropical Pacific. While phytoplankton biomass in the CRD is dominated by picophytoplankton (<2-µm cells) with especially high concentrations of Synechococcus spp . , we found high mesozooplankton biomass (∼5 g dry weight m -2 ) and grazing impact (12-50% integrated water column chlorophyll a ), indicative of efficient food web transfer from primary producers to higher levels. In contrast to the relative uniformity in water-column chlorophyll a and mesozooplankton biomass, variability in herbivory was substantial, with lower rates in the central dome region and higher rates in areas offset from the dome center. While grazing rates were unrelated to total phytoplankton, correlations with cyanobacteria (negative) and biogenic SiO 2 production (positive) suggest that partitioning of primary production among phytoplankton sizes contributes to the variability observed in mesozooplankton metrics. We propose that advection of upwelled waters away from the dome center is accompanied by changes in mesozooplankton composition and grazing rates, reflecting small changes within the primary producers. Small changes within the phytoplankton community resulting in large changes in the mesozooplankton suggest that the variability in lower trophic level dynamics was effectively amplified through the food web.

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