Biological activities in the North Sea I. Comparison of Calanus helgolandicus and Calanus finmarchicus vertical distribution and production.

Abstract Comparison on abundance, vertical distribution and reproduction of the cousin species, the boreal Calanus finmarchicus and temperate Calanus helgolandicus was conducted on data collected on 4 cruises in July and August north of the Dogger Bank, North Sea. During this period the water column...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Plankton Research
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2011
Subjects:
Mak
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2262/57754
https://doi.org/10.1093/plankt/FBQ085
Description
Summary:Abstract Comparison on abundance, vertical distribution and reproduction of the cousin species, the boreal Calanus finmarchicus and temperate Calanus helgolandicus was conducted on data collected on 4 cruises in July and August north of the Dogger Bank, North Sea. During this period the water column was highly stratified with a tidally generated deep chlorophyll maximum at 30 m depth. When co-occurring, a separation of the species was evident, where C. finmarchicus preferred colder (9?C) deeper waters while C. helgolandicus stayed in the warmer (16?C) surface waters. Egg production rates were not statistically different between the species, and the population egg production depended primarily on female abundance and was generally higher for C. finmarchicus. Egg production rates of the Calanus spp. were best explained by the abundance of autotrophic and heterotrophic dinoflagellates, flagellates and ciliates. Hatching success remained over 90% at all times but the estimated naupliar survival (N1-6) was only 9%. The chlorophyll maximum supported highest faecal pellet production and egg production at the stations close to the bank. This study shows that C. finmarchicus can remain reproductively active in the North Sea ecosystem longer than previously thought, and with warmer surface temperatures retreat to cooler, deeper waters utilizing the deep chlorophyll maximum. This implies that C. finmarchicus cannot be reliably sampled with the Continuous Plankton Recorder during summer. : Koski, Marja, mak@dfu.min.dk merged with this user on 20-Dec-2007 by Stader, Lulu (Koski, Marja) sjo@aqua.dtu.dk (Jonasdottir, Sigrun Huld) mak@aqua.dtu.dk (Koski, Marja) Technical Universtity of Denmark, National Institute for Aquatic Resources - 2920 Charlottenlund - DENMARK (Jonasdottir, Sigrun Huld) Technical Universtity of Denmark, National Institute for Aquatic Resources - 2920 Charlottenlund - DENMARK (Koski, Marja) UNITED STATES (Koski, Marja) DENMARK UNITED STATES