Microzooplankton dynamics during the development of the spring bloom in the northeast Atlantic.

Microzooplankton community composition, abundance, biomass and grazing impact were assessed, along with measurements of ciliate growth and mortality, during the onset of the spring bloom in the north-east Atlantic. The study was undertaken as part of the UK Blogeochemical Ocean Flux Study during I M...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom
Main Authors: Fileman, ES, Leakey, Ray
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
SEA
Online Access:https://pure.uhi.ac.uk/en/publications/d3ceb0a0-fa54-4aee-857c-c8941fe2a415
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0025315405011653
Description
Summary:Microzooplankton community composition, abundance, biomass and grazing impact were assessed, along with measurements of ciliate growth and mortality, during the onset of the spring bloom in the north-east Atlantic. The study was undertaken as part of the UK Blogeochemical Ocean Flux Study during I May to 15 June 1990. The microzooplankton community was composed of protozoans and metazoan developmental stages with respective mixed-layer depth integrated biomass values ranging from 127 to 638 and 74 to 394 mg C m(-2). High numbers of aloricate ciliates (up to 35,000 cells 1(-1)) dominated the microzooplankton community during early May prior to the onset of the spring bloom. Ciliate abundance then declined rapidly during mid-May with community growth rates ranging from -0.71 to 0.23 d(-1). High abundances of metazoplankton (up to 400 1(-1)) were also recorded at this time and may have contributed to the decline in ciliate numbers. In late May and early June the protozoan community comprised a more even mix of dinoflagellates, tintinnids and aloricate ciliates. Phytoplankton mortality rates, measured using a dilution technique, ranged from 0.2 to 0.5 d(-1). The microzooplankton consumed 8 to 44 mu g C I(-1)d(-1), equivalent to between 16 and 40% of the chlorophyll biomass and 38 and 154% of primary production. These high rates of herbivory reflect the predominance of small ( <5 mu m in length) phytoplankton cells present throughout the first half of the study and support previous studies demonstrating the microzooplankton to be the main grazers of phytoplankton in the north-cast Atlantic. However, there is also evidence that a disparity between predator and prey may have prevented a response by the microzooplankton to rapid increases in phytoplankton biomass and production during the spring bloom.