Mesozooplankton size structure in the Canary Current System

Changes in plankton composition influences the dynamics of marine food webs and carbon sinking rates. Understanding the core structure and function of the plankton distribution is of paramount importance to know their role in trophic transfer and efficiency. Here, we studied the zooplankton distribu...

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Published inMarine environmental research Vol. 188; p. 105976
Main Authors Couret, María, Landeira, José M., Tuset, Víctor M., Sarmiento-Lezcano, Airam N., Vélez-Belchí, Pedro, Hernández-León, Santiago
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier Ltd 01.06.2023
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Summary:Changes in plankton composition influences the dynamics of marine food webs and carbon sinking rates. Understanding the core structure and function of the plankton distribution is of paramount importance to know their role in trophic transfer and efficiency. Here, we studied the zooplankton distribution, abundance, composition, and size spectra for the characterization of the community under different oceanographic conditions in the Canaries-African Transition Zone (C-ATZ). This region is a transition zone between the coastal upwelling and the open ocean showing a high variability because of the physical, chemical, and biological changes between eutrophic and oligotrophic conditions through the annual cycle. During the late winter bloom (LWB), chlorophyll a and primary production were higher compared to that of the stratified season (SS), especially in the upwelling influenced area. Abundance distribution analysis clustered stations into two main groups according to the season (productive versus stratified season), and one group sampled in the upwelling influenced area. Size-spectra analysis showed steeper slopes during daytime in the SS, suggesting a less structured community and a higher trophic efficiency during the LWB due to the favorable oceanographic conditions. We also observed a significant difference between day and nighttime size spectra due to community change during diel vertical migration. Cladocera were the key taxa differentiating an Upwelling-group, from a LWB- and SS-group. These two latter groups were differentiated by Salpidae and Appendicularia mainly. Data obtained in this study suggested that abundance composition might be useful when describing community taxonomic changes, while size-spectra gives an idea of the ecosystem structure, predatory interactions with higher trophic levels and shifts in size structure. [Display omitted] •Seasonality modulates specimens size spectra in mesozooplankton.•Specimens size spectra in zooplankton showed day/night differences due to diel vertical migrants.•Abundance and size spectra analysis are a powerful analysis for a multidisciplinary approach for zooplankton characterization.
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ISSN:0141-1136
1879-0291
DOI:10.1016/j.marenvres.2023.105976