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Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in biodiversity of phytoplankton, zooplankton, fishes and macrobenthos in the Southern Caspian Sea after the invasion of the ctenophore Mnemiopsis Leidyi

TLDR
Monitoring for 6 years showed that the population explosion of the alien ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi in the southern Caspian Sea coincided with a decline in the abundance and species number of mesozooplankton, and some changes in the macrobenthic fauna were also conspicuous after the increase of this ctenophile.
Abstract
Monitoring for 6 years (2001–2006) showed that the population explosion of the alien ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi in the southern Caspian Sea coincided with a decline in the abundance and species number of mesozooplankton. While this decline appeared to have reduced the nourishment of sprat (also known as kilka), it seemed to have affected phytoplankton favorably mainly due to the decrease in grazing pressure. During 2001–2002, when M. leidyi abundance and biomass were at their highest levels, abundance of dinoflagellates and cyanophytes exceeded that of diatoms. Before the invasion (1996) and in some years after the invasion (2003, 2004 and 2006) diatom abundance was higher than the abundance of other groups. In September 2005, an unprecedented bloom of the toxic cyanophyte Nodularia sp. was observed in the southern Caspian Sea. Disappearance of edible zooplankton such as Eurytemora spp. was among the first changes observed after the expansion of M. leidyi in the area. Some changes in the macrobenthic fauna were also conspicuous after the increase of this ctenophore. While the biomass of some deposit feeders, such as the polychaete Nereis diversicolor and oligochaete species increased, benthic crustaceans decreased sharply in abundance during 2001–2003 and completely disappeared during 2004–2006. Iranian catches of kilka, the most abundant and widespread zooplanktivorous fish, decreased significantly in the southern Caspian Sea after 1999. Iranian landings of kilka dropped ~70% from 69,070 ± 20,270 t during 1995–2000 to 23,430 ± 12,240 t during 2001–2006, resulting in a loss of at least 125 million US dollars to the economy. There were also changes in the total catches of large predators such as the kutum and mullet, which mainly feed on kilka, between 1991 and 2006.

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Alien species in a brackish water temperate ecosystem: Annual-scale dynamics in response to environmental variability

TL;DR: Investigation of temporal variability of 11 alien species representing different trophic levels and ecological functions in two gulfs of the brackish Baltic Sea in relation to environmental change finds that the observed large shifts in environmental parameters have no uniform consequences to the alien biota.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mass occurrence of the ctenophore Bolinopsis vitrea (L. Agassiz, 1860) in the nearshore southern Adriatic Sea (Kotor Bay, Montenegro)

TL;DR: Results of the investigation indicate that mass occurrence of B. vitrea could have a great impact on the Kotor Bay ecosystem and their predation on copepods would reduce grazing pressure on phytoplankton, favouring an uncommon bloom of the latter.
Journal ArticleDOI

Identifying the drivers of abundance and size of the invasive ctenophore Mnemiopsis leidyi in Northwestern Mediterranean lagoons.

TL;DR: A bimonthly survey conducted in 2010-11 in three lagoons and at two adjacent coastal stations along the French Mediterranean coast found that M. leidyi was present only in Berre and Bages-Sigean with maximum abundances observed in late summer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strong biopollution in the southern Caspian Sea: the comb jelly Mnemiopsis leidyi case study

TL;DR: The method used in this study seems to be applicable for evaluating spatial and temporal variations of the invasive impacts of gelatinous zooplankton in other marine regions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Phytoplankton–zooplankton dynamics vary with nutrients: a microcosm study with the cyanobacterium Coleofasciculus chthonoplastes and cladoceran Moina micrura

TL;DR: The results suggest that the stability of phytoplankton-zooplankton systems varies with nutrients, and imply that extremely low or high nutrient load may destabilize phy toplankon-zo plankton systems.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biovolume calculation for pelagic and benthic microalgae

TL;DR: A set of geometric shapes and mathematical equations for calculating biovolumes of >850 pelagic and benthic marine and freshwater microalgal genera are presented and designed to minimize the effort of microscopic measurement.
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ICES zooplankton methodology manual

Roger Harris
TL;DR: This paper presents the results of a large-scale study of sampling and experimental design of Zooplankton dynamics in response to the prokaryoticarming crisis in the Southern Ocean.
Book ChapterDOI

Jellyfish blooms: are populations increasing globally in response to changing ocean conditions?

TL;DR: Over recent decades, man's expanding influence on the oceans has begun to cause real change and there is reason to think that in some regions, new blooms of jellyfish are occurring in response to some of the cumulative effects of these impacts.

Distribution and Abundance

TL;DR: Rodent distribution and abundance in relation to season, habitat, and cover solely in agricultural habitats of Vigo County, Indiana was investigated in this paper, and the specific objective of this report is to relate those findings to explain the occurrence of these rodents in cultivated field ecosystems and to compare their results with those of previous studies to determine what changes, if any, have occurred in the distribution and abundances of these animals in cultivated fields.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate effects on formation of jellyfish and ctenophore blooms: a review

TL;DR: In eleven species studied from subtropical, temperate and subarctic environments, warm temperatures were related to large population sizes; three scyphozoan species in the North Sea, and one mesopelagic hydromedusan were exceptions to that trend.
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