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Article
Multisensor Sampling of Pelagic Ecosystem Variables in a Coastal Environment to Estimate Zooplankton Grazing Impact
Continental Shelf Research
  • Tracey Sutton, University of South Florida
  • T. L. Hopkins, University of South Florida
  • Andrew Remsen, University of South Florida
  • Scott Burghhart, University of South Florida
ORCID
0000-0002-5280-7071
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2001
Keywords
  • Zooplankton,
  • Phytoplankton,
  • Grazing,
  • Red tides,
  • Plankton sampling,
  • USA,
  • Florida,
  • West Florida shelf
Abstract

Sampling was conducted on the west Florida continental shelf ecosystem modeling site to estimate zooplankton grazing impact on primary production. Samples were collected with the high-resolution sampler, a towed array bearing electronic and optical sensors operating in tandem with a paired net/bottle verification system. A close biological–physical coupling was observed, with three main plankton communities: 1. a high-density inshore community dominated by larvaceans coincident with a salinity gradient; 2. a low-density offshore community dominated by small calanoid copepods coincident with the warm mixed layer; and 3. a high-density offshore community dominated by small poecilostomatoid and cyclopoid copepods and ostracods coincident with cooler, sub-pycnocline oceanic water. Both high-density communities were associated with relatively turbid water. Applying available grazing rates from the literature to our abundance data, grazing pressure mirrored the above bio-physical pattern, with the offshore sub-pycnocline community contributing ∼65% of grazing pressure despite representing only 19% of the total volume of the transect. This suggests that grazing pressure is highly localized, emphasizing the importance of high-resolution sampling to better understand plankton dynamics. A comparison of our grazing rate estimates with primary production estimates suggests that mesozooplankton do not control the fate of phytoplankton over much of the area studied (<5% grazing of daily primary production), but “hot spots” (∼25–50% grazing) do occur which may have an effect on floral composition.

DOI
doi:10.1016/S0278-4343(00)00074-1
Comments

©2001 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

Additional Comments
Office of Naval Research grant #s: ONR-N00014-96-1-5020, ONR-N00014-97-1-0504
Citation Information
Tracey Sutton, T. L. Hopkins, Andrew Remsen and Scott Burghhart. "Multisensor Sampling of Pelagic Ecosystem Variables in a Coastal Environment to Estimate Zooplankton Grazing Impact" Continental Shelf Research Vol. 21 Iss. 1 (2001) p. 69 - 87 ISSN: 0278-4343
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/tracey-sutton/60/