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| Title: | Effects of low dissolved oxygen on zooplankton predation by the ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi |
| Authors: | Decker, Mary Beth Breitburg, Denise Purcell, Jennifer E. |
| Keywords: | Hypoxia Feeding Digestion Zooplankton Acartia tonsa Copepod Chesapeake bay |
| Issue Date: | 14-Oct-2004 |
| Publisher: | Inter-Research |
| Citation: | Marine Ecology Progress Series, 280: pp. 163-72 |
| Abstract: | The occurrence of low dissolved oxygen (DO), caused by vertical stratification and
excess nutrient inputs, is an important and widely occurring physical feature in aquatic systems.
Because some gelatinous species, such as the lobate ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi are more tolerant
of low DO concentrations than their prey and competitors, hypoxia may have profound effects on
trophic interactions. Predation, clearance and digestion rates of ctenophores feeding on zooplankton
(primarily Acartia tonsa) were measured at 1.0, 2.0, 3.0 mg l–1 and air-saturated (approximately
7 mg l–1) DO. Clearance of zooplankton by large ctenophores (mean 22.5 ml, range 7 to 46 ml) was
greater at low DO concentrations than under normoxic conditions. In contrast, consumption of zooplankton
by small (mean 2.9 ml, range 1 to 10 ml) M. leidyi did not differ among DO levels. Similarly,
ctenophore digestion rates were unchanged at oxygen concentrations as low as 1 mg l–1. Jumping
frequency of A. tonsa copepods decreased significantly with decreasing DO concentration (1.0, 2.0,
3.0 mg l–1 and air-saturated). Such changes in prey behavior in low DO could affect both encounter
and capture rates, potentially making less-tolerant prey more vulnerable to predation in hypoxic
waters. Gelatinous species, which are more tolerant of hypoxia than fishes, may be able to inhabit
regions of low oxygen that are avoided by zooplanktivorous fishes with high oxygen requirements.
This could lead to dominance of gelatinous predators in areas affected by severe hypoxia and might
alter energy pathways in these systems. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10088/81 |
| Appears in Collections: | SERC Staff Publications
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