Feeding biology of three euphausiid species in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Archipelago (Southern Ocean)

The feeding biology of three euphausiid species, Euphausia vallentini (adults and juveniles), E. longirostris and Nematoscelis megalops was investigated during austral autumn (April/May) of 1998 and 1999, in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Islands (Southern Ocean). Data on the abundance and biomas...

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Main Author: Gurney, Leigh Josephine
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 2000
Subjects:
Online Access:http://vital.seals.ac.za:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:5695
http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005381
id ftsealsdc:vital:5695
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spelling ftsealsdc:vital:5695 2023-05-15T18:03:27+02:00 Feeding biology of three euphausiid species in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Archipelago (Southern Ocean) Gurney, Leigh Josephine 2000 101 leaves pdf http://vital.seals.ac.za:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:5695 http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005381 English eng Rhodes University Faculty of Science, Zoology and Entomology vital:5695 http://vital.seals.ac.za:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:5695 http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005381 Gurney, Leigh Josephine Euphausiacea Euphausiacea -- Feeding and feeds Thesis Masters MSc 2000 ftsealsdc 2021-05-14T04:41:31Z The feeding biology of three euphausiid species, Euphausia vallentini (adults and juveniles), E. longirostris and Nematoscelis megalops was investigated during austral autumn (April/May) of 1998 and 1999, in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Islands (Southern Ocean). Data on the abundance and biomass of these species, estimated from bongo net tows, were investigated. Trophic position was assessed using gut contents and stable nitrogen isotope measurements. Feeding rate and daily carbon ration were estimated using the gut fluorescence and the gut fullness techniques. Vertical migrations into the surface waters at night were found to be strong for Euphausia vallentini adults and juveniles. Associated with these migrations were clear diel feeding patterns. Insufficient data during daylight hours for E. longirostris made it impossible to determine diel feeding patterns, but high feeding activity did occur during dark hours. Nematoscelis megalops did not show any distinct diel feeding pattern, but slightly higher gut fullness indices in the late afternoon suggested that feeding activity may have been highest during this period. For both Euphausia spp. high gut pigment levels were recorded in 1999, which corresponded to higher ambient chlorophyll a concentrations for that year. Highest initial gut pigment levels and highest ingestion rates were found for Euphausia longirostris in both years and lowest values were observed for N. megalops. High phytoplankton and low metazoan contributions to the diet of Euphausia vallentini juveniles, as shown in the gut content analysis, and low stable nitrogen isotope ratios (ð¹⁵N = 1.39±0.31), both indicated that this group was principally herbivorous. The results of gut content analysis of the adults of E. vallentini were similar to those of the juveniles, however, stable nitrogen isotope results showed that there was a higher degree of omnivory (ð¹⁵N = 3.81±0.66). Daily ration estimates from the gut fluorescence and fullness techniques showed that between 3.3 and 25.7 % of E. vallentini adults total daily carbon ration was derived from autotrophic sources. Although the contribution of carnivory to the diet was difficult to determine, the adults of this species may be considered omnivorous. Irrespective of the degree of carnivory, a dietry shift with an increase in size was evident for this species. Gut content analysis for Euphausia longirostris showed that this species consumed large amounts of both phytoplankton and metazoan prey and this was reflected in the stable nitrogen isotope results (ð¹⁵N = 6.88±0.60). These findings were supported by the results of the daily carbon ration estimates which showed that autotrophic carbon contributed between 6.9 and 20.3 % of the daily carbon consumption. The gut content analysis suggested that N. megalops was omnivorous, and the stable nitrogen isotope results place it in a trophic position equivalent to that of E. longirostris (ð¹⁵N = 6.83±0.78). Calculations from daily ration estimates suggested that only 3.1 % in 1998, and 3.2 % in 1999, of the carbon ingested was of autotrophic origin. This species may therefore be considered carnivorous. Implications of the findings of this study are discussed in terms of carbon cycling in the Southern Ocean. Master Thesis Prince Edward Islands Southern Ocean SEALS Digital Commons (South East Academic Libraries System, South Africa) Southern Ocean Austral
institution Open Polar
collection SEALS Digital Commons (South East Academic Libraries System, South Africa)
op_collection_id ftsealsdc
language English
topic Euphausiacea
Euphausiacea -- Feeding and feeds
spellingShingle Euphausiacea
Euphausiacea -- Feeding and feeds
Gurney, Leigh Josephine
Feeding biology of three euphausiid species in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Archipelago (Southern Ocean)
topic_facet Euphausiacea
Euphausiacea -- Feeding and feeds
description The feeding biology of three euphausiid species, Euphausia vallentini (adults and juveniles), E. longirostris and Nematoscelis megalops was investigated during austral autumn (April/May) of 1998 and 1999, in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Islands (Southern Ocean). Data on the abundance and biomass of these species, estimated from bongo net tows, were investigated. Trophic position was assessed using gut contents and stable nitrogen isotope measurements. Feeding rate and daily carbon ration were estimated using the gut fluorescence and the gut fullness techniques. Vertical migrations into the surface waters at night were found to be strong for Euphausia vallentini adults and juveniles. Associated with these migrations were clear diel feeding patterns. Insufficient data during daylight hours for E. longirostris made it impossible to determine diel feeding patterns, but high feeding activity did occur during dark hours. Nematoscelis megalops did not show any distinct diel feeding pattern, but slightly higher gut fullness indices in the late afternoon suggested that feeding activity may have been highest during this period. For both Euphausia spp. high gut pigment levels were recorded in 1999, which corresponded to higher ambient chlorophyll a concentrations for that year. Highest initial gut pigment levels and highest ingestion rates were found for Euphausia longirostris in both years and lowest values were observed for N. megalops. High phytoplankton and low metazoan contributions to the diet of Euphausia vallentini juveniles, as shown in the gut content analysis, and low stable nitrogen isotope ratios (ð¹⁵N = 1.39±0.31), both indicated that this group was principally herbivorous. The results of gut content analysis of the adults of E. vallentini were similar to those of the juveniles, however, stable nitrogen isotope results showed that there was a higher degree of omnivory (ð¹⁵N = 3.81±0.66). Daily ration estimates from the gut fluorescence and fullness techniques showed that between 3.3 and 25.7 % of E. vallentini adults total daily carbon ration was derived from autotrophic sources. Although the contribution of carnivory to the diet was difficult to determine, the adults of this species may be considered omnivorous. Irrespective of the degree of carnivory, a dietry shift with an increase in size was evident for this species. Gut content analysis for Euphausia longirostris showed that this species consumed large amounts of both phytoplankton and metazoan prey and this was reflected in the stable nitrogen isotope results (ð¹⁵N = 6.88±0.60). These findings were supported by the results of the daily carbon ration estimates which showed that autotrophic carbon contributed between 6.9 and 20.3 % of the daily carbon consumption. The gut content analysis suggested that N. megalops was omnivorous, and the stable nitrogen isotope results place it in a trophic position equivalent to that of E. longirostris (ð¹⁵N = 6.83±0.78). Calculations from daily ration estimates suggested that only 3.1 % in 1998, and 3.2 % in 1999, of the carbon ingested was of autotrophic origin. This species may therefore be considered carnivorous. Implications of the findings of this study are discussed in terms of carbon cycling in the Southern Ocean.
format Master Thesis
author Gurney, Leigh Josephine
author_facet Gurney, Leigh Josephine
author_sort Gurney, Leigh Josephine
title Feeding biology of three euphausiid species in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Archipelago (Southern Ocean)
title_short Feeding biology of three euphausiid species in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Archipelago (Southern Ocean)
title_full Feeding biology of three euphausiid species in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Archipelago (Southern Ocean)
title_fullStr Feeding biology of three euphausiid species in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Archipelago (Southern Ocean)
title_full_unstemmed Feeding biology of three euphausiid species in the vicinity of the Prince Edward Archipelago (Southern Ocean)
title_sort feeding biology of three euphausiid species in the vicinity of the prince edward archipelago (southern ocean)
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 2000
url http://vital.seals.ac.za:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:5695
http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005381
geographic Southern Ocean
Austral
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
Austral
genre Prince Edward Islands
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Prince Edward Islands
Southern Ocean
op_relation vital:5695
http://vital.seals.ac.za:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:5695
http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1005381
op_rights Gurney, Leigh Josephine
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