scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Growth and development rates of the copepod Calanus finmarchicus reared in the laboratory

TLDR
It is recommended that secondary production rates of Calanus finmarchicus and possibly other lipid-storing copepods not be estimated from egg production mea- surements alone, as has been suggested for other species of copepod, because growth, including structural growth, is not equivalent for all stages.
Abstract
Development rates, nitrogen- and carbon-specific growth rates, size, and condition were determined for the copepod Calanus finmarchicus reared at 3 temperatures (4, 8, and 12°C) at non-limiting food concentrations and 2 limiting food concentrations at 8°C in the laboratory. Devel- opment rates were equiproportional, but not isochronal. Naupliar stage durations were similar, except for non-feeding stages, which were of short duration, and the first feeding stage, which was prolonged, while copepodite stage durations increased with increasing stage of development. Under limiting food concentrations at 8°C, development rates were prolonged but similar relative patterns in stage durations were observed. Body size (length and weight) was inversely related to temperature and positively related to food concentration. Condition measurements were not affected by tempera- ture, but were positively related to food concentration. Growth rates increased with increasing tem- perature and increased asymptotically with increasing food concentration. At high food concentra- tions, growth rates of naupliar stages were high (except for individuals molting from the final naupliar stage to the first copepodite stage, in which growth rates were depressed), while growth of copepodites decreased with increasing stage of development. Neither nitrogen nor carbon growth rates, the former a proxy for structural growth, were exponential over the entire life cycle, but rather sigmoidal. Carbon-specific growth rates were greater than nitrogen-specific growth rates, and this difference increased with increasing stage of development, reflecting an augmentation in lipid depo- sition in the older stages. However, nitrogen and carbon growth rates were more similar under food- limited conditions. Based on this study, we recommend that secondary production rates of Calanus finmarchicus and possibly other lipid-storing copepods not be estimated from egg production mea- surements alone, as has been suggested for other species of copepods, because growth, including structural growth, is not equivalent for all stages.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional responses for zooplankton feeding on multiple resources: a review of assumptions and biological dynamics

TL;DR: This work defines a new classification of multiple resource responses that is based on preference, selection and switching, and develops a set of mathematical diagnostics that elucidate model assumptions to enable modelers to make more informed decisions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Density-dependent mortality in an oceanic copepod population

TL;DR: A high-frequency time series reveals that per capita mortality rates of eggs of Calanus finmarchicus Gunnerus are a function of the abundance of adult females and juveniles and can be influenced as much by time-dependent mortality rates as by variations in ‘bottom up’ forcing.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climate change in the southeastern Bering Sea: impacts on pollock stocks and implications for the oscillating control hypothesis

TL;DR: Observations presented here indicate the need for revision of the OCH to account for shifts in energy flow through differing food-web pathways due to warming and cooling on the southeastern Bering Sea shelf.
Journal ArticleDOI

Population dynamics of salmon lice Lepeophtheirus salmonis on Atlantic salmon and sea trout

TL;DR: To facilitate development of models of salmon lice population dynamics, the available experimental information on its demographic rates is reviewed and areas where further research is needed are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

The North Atlantic Ocean as habitat for Calanus finmarchicus: Environmental factors and life history traits

TL;DR: A new, pan-Atlantic compilation and analysis of data on Calanus finmarchicus abundance, demography, dormancy, egg production and mortality in relation to basin-scale patterns of temperature, phytoplankton biomass, circulation and other environmental characteristics in the context of understanding factors determining the distribution and abundance of C. fin marchicus across its North Atlantic habitat is presented.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Studies of marine planktonic diatoms: i. cyclotella nana hustedt, and detonula confervacea (cleve) gran.

TL;DR: Bacteria-free clones of the small centric diatom Cyclotella nana Hustedt were isolated, three from estuarine localities, one from Continental Shelf waters, and one from the Sargasso Sea as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Food size spectra, ingestion and growth of the copepodAcartia tonsa during development: Implications for determination of copepod production

TL;DR: In situ estimates of female fecundity may be used for a rapid time- and site-specific field estimate of copepod production and are shown to be fairly robust to even large deviations from the assumptions.
Book ChapterDOI

Comparative life histories in the genera Calanus and Neocalanus in high latitudes of the northern hemisphere

TL;DR: Salinity-induced stability and shallow water favor blooms in the boundary waters of both oceans, which may be of greater importance in the Atlantic because of the proportionally greater area of continental shelf there.
Related Papers (5)