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1.
Size influences the photosynthesis-irradiance (P-I) relationship in colonies of the branched reef-coral Pocillopora damicornis and in intact plants of the branched redmacroalga Acanthophora spicifera. The light saturation constant is proportional to size. Maximum net rate of oxygen production (net photosynthesis) per colony and nocturnal dark oxygen-uptake rate per colony (respiration) increase with increasing size, but the latter increases at a much lower rate. Therefore, the photosynthesis to respiration ratio increases with increasing canopy size. Large increases in chlorophyll per unit reef area also accompany increase in size. The initial slope (alpha) of the chlorophyll-specific P-I curve and assimilation number are inversely related to size. Integrated daytime oxygen production increases with size more rapidly than nighttime oxygen consumption. Consequently, net primary production of an entire colony or plant (or rate per unit area of reef) increases with increasing size of the canopy. Production efficiency also increases with size. The coral is rigid, symmetrical and highly organized. Chlorophyll distribution is more stratified in comparison to the macroalga. The coral shows higher photosynthetic efficiency, as would be expected according to the stratified production model of Odum et al. (1958). This research was conducted on specimens from Kaneohe Bay, Oahu, Hawaii, USA in 1981.  相似文献   

2.
In situ zooplankton grazing rates on natural particle assemblages were stimated by measuring zooplankton uptake of labelled autotrophic (with Na14CO3) and heterotrophic (with [methyl-3H]-thymidine) particulate matter in 1-h incubations in clear, Plexiglas, Haney chambers. The in situ grazing rates are in the same range as those measured for zooplankton in the laboratory using standard particle counting techniques. A negative selection coefficient for 3H-labelled particles indicated a lower filtration efficiency or avoidance of these particles by zooplankton.  相似文献   

3.
Grazing in juvenile stages of some estuarine calanoid copepods   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The grazing of juvenile Eurytemora affinis, Acartia tonsa and A. clausi from the Chesapeake Bay (USA) was investigated using natural particle distributions and freshly caught copepods, live-sorted into stages. Data were analyzed in 110 size channels using an electronic particle counter, and filtering rates (FR) were estimated based on total particle removal (mean FR), and that for each size channel (giving maximum FR). Mean and maximum filtering rates increased from NVI (Nauplius Stage VI) through CVI (Copepodid Stage VI). Both rates plotted against weight satisfied a log fit best for A. tonsa, and a linear fit best for E. affinis. Results for A. tonsa were quite variable, apparently due to differences in temperature between experiments. Particle selection was investigated from the shape of the filtering rate curve over particle size. We define selective feeding by a FR curve which is higher in some size categories, and non-selective feeding by a flat FR curve. The general pattern was one of selective feeding in all copepodid stages of the three calanoid copepods investigated. E. affinis tended to track biomass peaks while Acartia spp.'s feeding was more variable, including feeding in size ranges of greatest particle concentration, on larger particles, and in other size categories as well. Experiments with nauplii tended to yield flat FR curves, and it may be that selective grazing appears with, or is greatly accentuated by, metamorphosis from NVI to CI (Copepodid Stage I).University of Maryland, Center for Environmental and Estuarine Studies Contribution No. 762.  相似文献   

4.
Filtration rates and the extent of phagocytosed food particles were determined in the offshore lamellibranchs Artica islandica and Modiolus modiolus in relation to particle concentration, body size and temperature. Pure cultures of the algae Chlamydomonas sp. and Dunaliella sp. were used as food. A new method for determining filtration rates was developed by modifying the classical indirect method. The concentration of the experimental medium (100%) was kept constant to ±1%. Whenever the bivalves removed algae from the medium, additional algae were added and the filtration rate of the bivalves expressed in terms of percentage amount of algae added per unit time. The concentration of the experimental medium was measured continuously by a flow colorimeter. By keeping the concentration constant, filtration rates could be determined even in relation to different definite concentrations and over long periods of time. The amount of phagocytosed food was measured by employing the biuret-method (algae cells ingested minus algae cells in faeces). Filtration rates vary continuously. As a rule, however, during a period of 24 h, two phases of high food consumption alternate with two phases of low food consumption during which the mussels' activities are almost exclusively occupied by food digestion. Filtration rate and amount of phagocytosed algae increase with increasing body size. Specimens of A. islandica with a body length of 33 to 83 mm filter between 0.7 to 71/h (30–280 mg dry weight of algae/24 h) and phagocytose 21 to 122 mg dry weight of algae during a period of 24 h. The extent of food utilization declines from 75 to 43% with increasing body size. In M. modiolus of 40 to 88 mm body length, the corresponding values of filtration rate and amount of phagocytosed algae range between 0.5 and 2.5 l/h (20–100 mg dry weight of algae) and 17 to 90 mg dry weight of algae, respectively; the percentage of food utilization does not vary much and lies near 87%. Filtration rate and amount of phagocytosed algae follow the allometric equation y=a·x b. In this equation, y represents the filtration rate (or the amount of phagocytosed algae), a the specific capacity of a mussel of 1 g soft parts (wet weight), x the wet weight of the bivalves' soft parts, and b the specific form of relationship between body size and filtration rate (or the amount of phagocytosed algae). The values obtained for b lie within a range which indicates that the filtration rate (or the amount of phagocytosed algae) is sometimes more or less proportional to body surface area, sometimes to body weight. Temperature coefficients for the filtration rate are in Arctica islandica Q10 (4°–14°C)=2.05 and Q10 (10°–20°C)=1.23, in Modiolus modiolus Q10 (4°–14°C)=2.33 and Q10 (10°–20°C)=1.63. In A. islandica, temperature coefficients for the amount of phagocytosed algae amount to Q10 (4°–14°C)=2.15 and Q10 (10°–20°C)=1.55, in M. modiolus to Q10 (4°–14°C)=2.54 and Q10 (10°–20°C)=1.92. Upon a temperature decrease from 12° to 4°C, filtration rate and amount of phagocytosed algae are reduced to 50%. At the increasing concentrations of 10×106, 20×106 and 40×106 cells of Chlamydomonas/l offered, filtration rates of both mollusc species decrease at the ratios 3:2:1. At 12°C, pseudofaeces production occurs in both species in a suspension of 40×106, at 20°C in 60×106 cells of Chlamydomonas/l. At 12°C and 10–20×106 cells of Chlamydomonas/l, the maximum amount of algae is phagocytosed. At 40×106 cells/l, the amount of phagocytosed cells is reduced by 26% as a consequence of low filtration rates and intensive production of pseudofaeces. At 20°C and 20–50×106 cells of Chlamydomonas/l, the maximum amount of algae is sieved out and phagocytosed; the concentration of 10×106 cells/l is too low and cannot be compensated for by increased activity of the molluscs. With increasing temperatures, the amount of suspended matter, allowing higher rates of filtration and food utilization, shifts toward higher particle concentrations; but at each temperature a threshold exists, above which increase in particle density is not followed by increase in the amount of particles ingested. Based on theoretical considerations and facts known from literature, 7 different levels of food concentration are distinguishable. Experiments with Chlamydomonas sp. and Dunaliella sp. used as food, reveal the combined influence of particle concentration and particle size on filtration rate. Supplementary experiments with Mytilus edulis resulted in filtration rates similar to those obtained for M. modiolus, whereas, experiments with Cardium edule, Mya arenaria, Mya truncata and Venerupis pullastra revealed low filtration rates. These species, inhabiting waters with high seston contents, seem to be adapted to higher food concentrations, and unable to compensate for low concentrations by higher filtration activities. Adaptation to higher food concentrations makes it possible to ingest large amounts of particles even at low filtration rates. Suspension feeding bivalves are subdivided into four groups on the basis of their different food filtration behaviour.  相似文献   

5.
Grazing rates and electivity indices of larvae and spat of Ostrea edulis L. were, measured and examined in relation to certain physical parameters using a flow-through system. Retention and size-selection were determined for the major particle sizes present in cultures of Isochrysis galbana Parke, an alga used frequently as food for bivalves. Cultures of the algae Dunaliella tertiolecta Butcher and Phaeodactylum tricornutum Bohlin were used as sources of particle suspensions of various sizes and shapes, respectively. While increases in flow rate caused increased grazing, the mode of selection of I. galbana particles remained constant. Filtration rate, F f was related to body size, W, by the general allometric equation R f =aW b,while particle-size preference in suspensions of I. galbana by both larvae and spat of O. edulis was independent of W. Grazing rates increased with temperature to an optimum temperature, which was related to the acclimation temperature. Increases above this optimum caused a reduction in feeding activity. No significant change in particle size-preference in the I. galbana suspension with temperature was observed. Grazing rates and selection were dependent, however, on particle number and volume. Both larvae and spat displayed maximum retention at optimum particle concentrations which tended to decrease with increasing particle size. Variations in cell shape of P. tricornutum had no measurable effect on selectivity by O. edulis.  相似文献   

6.
A new apparatus for long-term, continuous automatic measurements of filtration rates in suspension-feeding organisms is described. As the concentration of algae in the experimental medium is diminished by the filter-feeding activity of the experimental animals, algal suspension is automatically added, thus keeping the algal concentration constant. In this way, accurate determinations of filtration rates in relation to particle concentration are made possible. For determination of filtration rates in the common mussel Mytilus edulis L., individuals of different body size (shell length 8.5 to 56.5 mm) were used. Within the range of 10x106 to 40x106 cells of Dunaliella marina/l, mussels of the same body size filter-out approximately the same amount of algae at high or low concentrations. A low algal concentration is counterbalanced by a corresponding higher filtration rate. Within the range of body size (W=dry weight of tissues) and algal concentrations used, the filtration rate (F) follows the general allometric equation F=a·W b, where a and b are constants at specific experimental conditions. At a temperature of 12 °C, the values obtained for a are 2410 at a concentration of 20x106, and 1313 at a concentration of 40x106 Dunaliella cells/l; correspondingly, the filtration rates of a mussel of 1 g dry-tissue weight are 2410 ml/h and 1313 ml/h. b, the slope of the regression line (0.73 to 0.74), is independent of algal concentration. However, examination of all known measurements reveals that, most probably, the general allometric equation is an oversimplification; in large individuals there is a more pronounced decrease in filtration rate. The relationship between filtration rate, body size of mussels, and algal concentrations used is discussed.This work was made possible through a research grant from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft in connection with the program Litoralforschung — Abwässer in Küstennähe.  相似文献   

7.
The in situ grazing rate and nutritional condition of copepods were studied during October/November 1985, by analyzing gut fluorescence (feeding), body size and lipid composition (nutritional state), and electron transport system (ETS) activity (respiration rate) of copepods from surface-and deep-water in Kosterfjorden on the Swedish west coast. These parameters were related to the physical and biological environment, as defined by light, hydrography, autotrophic and bacterial production and seston in the water column. The results show a gradual build-up of the autumn phytoplankton bloom in the uppermost meters, with a peak in total autotrophic production in mid October of ca 550 mg C m–2 d–1, and a bacterial net production corresponding to 15% of this. Phytoplankton exudates made up, on average, 47% of the primary production and more than 50% of this was utilized by the bacteria. Copepods occurring in the surface-water exhibited grazing rates corresponding to between 11 and 18% of their body C d–1 and potential growth rates of 0 to 9% d–1. Copepod populations in the surface water were composed of individuals with higher average body-weight and lower lipid-proportion than those from the deep-water.Calanus finmarchicus in the deep-water showed characters indicating diapause condition, while this was not observed forAcartia clausi. Differences in lipid content and composition indicate thatC. finmarchicus, Pseudocalanus sp. andA. clausi represent three successive points on a scale of tolerance for fluctuations in the food environment. Adult femaleMetridia longa was the only one among seven species/stages of copepods in the deep-water ( 50 m depth) that contained phytoplankton pigments.Study performed through Tjärnö Marine Biological Laboratory, University of Göteborg, S-452 00 Strömstad, Sweden  相似文献   

8.
Grazing impact of microzooplankton on phytoplankton was investigated on the Grand Bank, Newfoundland, Canada, in April, July and October 1984, using a seawater dilution method. In April a large proportion of chlorophylla was in the microplankton size fraction (> 20µm) while in mid-summer and fall most was in the nanoplankton size fraction (< 20µm). Diatoms were the dominant phytoplankters in April, while undetermined flagellates and coccolithophores were abundant in other seasons. Major grazers were oligotrichous ciliates in all seasons. Instantaneous grazing rates on nanophytoplankton, as measured by changes in chlorophylla, varied from 0.12 to 0.43 d–1 and those on microphytoplankton from 0.19 to 0.68 d–1. Grazing rates did not change over 24 and 48 h intervals. This level of grazing corresponded to a daily loss of about 20 and 30% of standing stock of chlorophylla and about 50 and 70% loss of potential production in the two size fractions respectively. Taxon-specific grazing rates, calculated from microscopic enumeration, showed that small diatoms were grazed heavily, and their growth was controlled by grazing in late spring. In late summer and fall, undetermined flagellates and coccolithophores were also grazed at high rates but their growth rates were higher than the grazing rates, and therefore, were not controlled by microzooplankton. In general, microzooplankton grazed on whatever appropriate sized food was dominant in the experimental water. Their potential ability to control the growth of certain food species may be one of the causes determining the species composition of phytoplankton communities.  相似文献   

9.
Phytoplankton production, standing crop, and loss processes (respiration, sedimentation, grazing by zooplankton, and excretion) were measured on a daily basis during the growth, dormancy and decline of a winter-spring diatom bloom in a large-scale (13 m3) marine mesocosm in 1987. Carbonspecific rates of production and biomass change were highly correlated whereas production and loss rates were unrelated over the experimental period when the significant changes in algal biomass characteristic of phytoplankton blooms were occurring. The observed decline in diatom growth rates was caused by nutrient limitation. Daily phytoplankton production rates calculated from the phytoplankton continuity equation were in excellent agreement with rates independently determined using standard 14C techniques. A carbon budget for the winter bloom indicated that 82.4% of the net daytime primary production was accounted for by measured loss processes, 1.3% was present as standing crop at the end of the experiment, and 16.3% was unexplained. Losses via sedimentation (44.8%) and nighttime phytoplankton respiration (24.1%) predominated, while losses due to zooplankton grazing (10.7%) and nighttime phytoplankton excretion (2.8%) were of lesser importance. A model simulating daily phytoplankton biomass was developed to demonstrate the relative importance of the individual loss processes.  相似文献   

10.
M. Pagano  R. Gaudy 《Marine Biology》1986,90(4):551-564
The feeding activity of Eurytemora velox, a brackish copepod from temporary lakes of the south of France, was studied in 1978–1979 using various foods (natural particles, monospecific algal cultures, and artificial food) under different conditions of temperature and salinity. Experiments with Amphidinium sp. or Tetraselmis maculata as food showed that the ingestion rate increased with food concentration according to an asymptotic or a linear relationship. Although of slightly smaller size, T. maculata was ingested at a higher rate than Amphidinium sp. Large maximum daily rations (up to 150% of body carbon with Amphidinium sp. and up to 250% with T. maculata) were attained. These values, which greatly exceed those generally obtained with marine copepods, could result from adaptation of the feeding processes of this copepod to its very rich trophic environment. A significant correlation was demonstrated between ingestion rate and fecal pellet production using T. maculata as food. Therefore, daily fecal production was used as an index of feeding activity in experiments carried out with natural food, T. maculata cultures and artifical food (Tetramin). Increased temperature generally resulted in an activation of grazing and filtration rates and of fecal production at low temperatures (10° to 15°C), but a strong decrease was observed over 22°C. Differences of 10 S over or under the natural salinity level led to a decrease in fecal production, suggesting unachieved acclimatization to salinity variation due to a too short acclimation period before the experiments. Fecal pellet production was higher during the day than during the night. It depended also on the quality of food used: high values were obtained with T. maculata, Phaeodactylum tricornutum, Rhodomonas sp. and Chlamydomonas sp., low values with Chlorella sp. and Amphidinium sp., and medium values with natural food material. The assimilation rate (A) was calculated by Conover's methods. A significant negative correlation was obtained between A and the ash content of the food. High assimilation rates were attained with chlorophycean algae, while natural particulate food produced variable assimilation rates, depending on the amount of inorganic material present.
Biologie d'un copépode des mares temporaires du littoral méditerranéen français: Eurytemora velox
  相似文献   

11.
J. Vidal 《Marine Biology》1980,56(3):203-211
Weight-specific rates of individual production, total metabolic expenditure and assimilation, and net production efficiencies were estimated forCalanus pacificus Brodsky of selected body weights cultured at various phytoplankton concentrations and temperatures. The weight-specific rate of individual production increased hyperbolically with food concentration, and the maximum rate of individual production decreased logarithmically with a linear increase in body weight propotionally more at high than at low temperature. The weight-specific rate of total metabolic expenditure decreased logarithmically with increasing body weight and was unaffected by changes in food concentration. The effects of food concentration and temperature on the weight-specific rate of assimilation were similar to those on the rate of individual production, but the effect of body size differed considerably. The diversity in the temperature and body-size dependence of the maximum weight-specific rates of various physiological processes suggest (1) that, except for the metabolic rate, the allometric model (log-log relation) is inadequate for describing relationships between maximum rates of physiological processes and body size within species, and (2) that the common assumption that temperature affects the rates of various physiological processes in similar ways is not justified. Net production efficiency increased hyperbolically with food concentration, and the maximum production efficiency first increased slightly and then decreased gradually with increasing body weight. Small copepods attained higher efficiency at high temperature but larger ones did so at low temperature. The critical food concentrations for production efficiency and for the rate of individual production increased with increasing temperature and body size. Because of the effects of interactions among critical food concentration, temperature, and body size on the rates of growth and individual production and on net production efficiency, early development stages ofC. pacificus optimized growth and food conversion efficiency at high temperature, but late stages, particularly at low food concentrations, grew best and transformed food more efficiently at low temperature.Contribution No. 1130 From the Department of Oceanography, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195, USA  相似文献   

12.
In situ observations (1994 to 1996) of the behavior of Oikopleura vanhoeffeni Lohmann in combination with a previously published model can be used to give a good approximation of clearance rates. The model is based on tail beat frequency, time spent feeding and subsequent measurements of individual size (trunk length). These estimated clearance rates are in close agreement with clearance rates determined in the laboratory under static and flow-through conditions. A comparison of various techniques (such as measurement of gut pigment, and various particle removal and particle uptake methods) with the behavior-model approach, revealed a convergence of all rates within a threefold range. Most of this discrepancy can be explained by the number of non-feeding individuals and the deterioration of the feeding filters in the field. The main reasons for the similarity of the various clearance rate estimates are the low variability of the behavior of appendicularians in response to environmental variables, such as temperature and particle concentration, and their non-selective retention of particles. The suggested mechanistic approach has great value for estimating the flux of material and energy through populations of appendicularians for which only size and abundance data exist, or for appendicularian species that cannot be assessed empirically. Received: 26 August 1997 / Accepted: 28 September 1998  相似文献   

13.
A method for determining filtration rates in undisturbed suspension-feeding bivalves is described. Concentrations of particulate matter in the water collected in the inhalant (C i) and exhalant (C e) currents were estimated with an electronic particle counter. The clearance was calculated as , where Fl=flow rate through the tube collecting exhalant water. Only above critical levels of water flow (Fl) were clearances representative of filtration rates. At 10° to 13°C, the filtration rates (F, 1 h-1) within one or two orders of magnitude of dry weight (w, g), in Cardium echinatum L., C. edule L., Mytilus edulis L., Modiolus modiolus (L.) and Arctica islandica (L.) followed the allometric equations: 4.22w 0.62, 11.60w 0.70, 7.45w 0.66, 6.00w 0.75 and 5.55w 0.62, respectively. Five species of bivalves [Spisula subtruncata (da Costa), Hiatella striata (Fleuriau), Cultellus pellucidus (Pennant), Mya arenaria L. and Venerupis pullastra (Montagu)] filtered with the same rates as individuals of Cardium echinatum and A. islandica of equivalent soft weight. In Pecten furtivus and P. opercularis filtration rates were about twice the rates measured in individuals of Mytilus edulis of comparable body weight. The gill area in M. edulis increases with size at the same rate as the filtration rate.  相似文献   

14.
Effects of microalgal ectocrines on the feeding behavior of the blue mussel Mytilus edulis L., collected from Delaware Bay, Lewes, USA, were studied. Unialgal cultures of six species of marine microalgae were grown to the end of their exponential growth phase. Cells were removed by gentle filtration, leaving dissolved microalgal ectocrines in culture filtrates. Filtrates were then tested in filtration rate and particle selection bioassays. In filtration rate bioassays, dissolved ectocrines were delivered to mussels in a flow-through apparatus and removal of beads (6 m) used to determine rates. Filtration rates were significantly reduced by dissolved ectocrines from two of the microalgal species tested (Olisthodiscus luteus Carter and Dunaliella tertiolecta Butcher). None of the microalgal filtrates stimulated filtration rates of mussels. In particle selection bioassays, ectocrines were adsorbed onto either reverse phase (lipophilic) or normal phase (hydrophilic) microparticles (10 m) and delivered to mussels with an equal concentration of control treated particles. Mussels showed significant selection, either rejection or preferential ingestion, for ectocrine treated spheres depending upon microalgal species and sphere type used. This research shows that pre-ingestive chemical cues from microalgae can influence mussel feeding behavior. We suggest that epicellular ectocrines are more important in mediating this behavior than dissolved ectocrines.  相似文献   

15.
A method of rapidly determining zooplankton grazing rates on natural mixed phytoplankton populations using 14C is described. The method simplifies the design of grazing experiments as the grazing time can be kept short enough to prevent recycling of the isotope, and growth of the phytoplankton substrate. Very high specific activity, 14C-labelled phytoplankton concentrated either by centrifugation or sieving, may be used either as the sole grazing substrate, or as a tracer in natural mixed phytoplankton. Zooplankton, confined in glass jars at either ambient, or higher than ambient concentrations, are permitted to feed on the phytoplankton for periods of 30 min and 2 h, and are then separated by sieving. The zooplankton community grazing rate, or, if the samples are sorted into species, the individual species grazing rates, can be determined after scintillation counting of the zooplankton. The rate of appearance of 14C-labelled phytoplankton in the zooplankton is an estimate of the grazing rate, and the slope of the line joining the grazing rates at various phytoplankton concentrations gives an estimate of the grazing rate constant for the zooplankton population. The method provides a quick way of obtaining both zooplankton population, and individual species grazing rates on natural mixed phytoplankton. In two experiments, labelled phytoplankton was used as the sole grazing substrate in concentrations ranging between 0.4 and 5 times ambient levels. Grazing rate constants, for net-caught zooplankton concentrated to 46 times (Experiment 1) and 28 times (Experiment, 2) ambient estuarine levels were-0.14and-0.12 of the phytoplankton standing stock per day, respectively. There was a linear increase in the amount of phytoplankton grazed with an increase in phytoplankton concentration up to four times ambient phytoplankton levels. When tracer amounts of labelled phytoplankton were added to samples containing both phytoplankton and zooplankton at ambient concentrations the grazing rate constants were-0.28 and-0.42 of the phytoplankton standing stock per day. We conclude that zooplankton grazing was the major control factor of phytoplankton population size during October–November 1975 in South West Arm, Port Hacking, near Sydney, Australia.  相似文献   

16.
The feeding behavior of adult Atlantic menhaden (Brevoortia tyrannus) upon 5 species of phytoplankton and 2 species of zooplankton has been studied. Four recognizable feeding stages which were a function of the concentration and size of the food particles were observed. During rapid feeding the fish swam at a constant speed for a prolonged period over a wide range of particle concentrations. Particle and food carbon-concentrations at the threshold for initiation and termination of feeding were inversely related to particle size. Carteria chuii (13.2 μ) was not grazed at a significant rate, while two-cell chains of Skeletonema costatum (16. 5 μ) were filtered from the water, indicating a minimum-size threshold for filtration of between 13 and 16 μ. The most rapid filtering rates were observed for the copepod Acartia tonsa ( \(\bar x\) volume swept clear = 24.8 l/fish/min). The maximum food-particle size acceptable to a menhaden appears to be between Acartia tonsa (1200 μ) and adult Artemia salina (10 mm). These results suggest that the large schools of menhaden found in Atlantic coastal waters could have a significant effect on the plankton, selectively grazing zooplankton, larger phytoplankton, and the longer chains of chain-forming diatoms.  相似文献   

17.
During a repeat grid survey and drogue study carried out in the Lazarev Sea in the austral summer of 1994 to 1995, a sudden collapse of a rich population of the tunicate Salpa thompsoni was observed at the onset of a phytoplankton bloom. This may have been related to the inability of salps to regulate their filtration rate and avoid clogging of their filtering apparatus at particle concentrations ≥1 mg (chlorophyll a) m−3. It was at this stage that large numbers of salp individuals had their branchial cavities invaded by the copepod Rhincalanus gigas. Incubations, to compare the feeding rates of R.␣gigas in the presence and absence of salps, showed that copepods are able to utilize the high concentrations of microplankton accumulated in the food strand of the salp, thus enhancing their grazing efficiency. This is likely to represent a typical form of opportunistic parasitism. However, the timing of the invasion, and the observation that most salps could survive prolonged exposure to R. gigas invasion, suggest that the association may also constitute a novel type of symbiosis. S.␣thompsoni could potentially benefit from R. gigas cleaning its filtering apparatus when clogging due to high particle concentrations occurs. Received: 15 July 1996 / Accepted: 20 July 1996  相似文献   

18.
The one-dimensional theory of critical-length scales of phytoplankton patchiness is developed to include phytoplankton growth and herbivore grazing as functions of time and space. The critical-length scale L c for the pathch is then determined by the initial spatial distribution and concentration of the limiting nutrient and herbivores in addition to the daily averaged values of the growth and loss processes. The response of an initial phytoplankton patch to the stresses of turbulent diffusion, nutrient depletion, light periodicity, and nocturnal or continuous herbivore grazing is investigated numerically for several oceanic conditions. Nocturnal grazing, while less stressful on primary production than continous grazing, results in lower phytoplankton standing stocks. Increase in biomass of vertically migrating zooplankton results in a net loss of nutrient which might otherwise be egested, recycled, and utilized in the euphotic zone under continuous grazing conditions. The Ivlev constant is shown via sensitivity analysis to be a significant parameter ultimately influencing phytoplankton production. It is demonstrated numerically that diffusion of phytoplankton cells from areas of high concentration to low concentration prevents the local extinction of the standing stock, thereby rendering a positive herbivore grazing-threshold unnecessary for ecosystem stability.  相似文献   

19.
Dynamics of colony development in Polistes dominulus: a modeling approach   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A simple model based on feedback mechanisms is developed to describe the dynamics of brood production and colony development of primitively eusocial paper wasps. The presence of pupae and empty cells stimulate egg laying, which varies between a basic rate and a physiological maximum. Newly hatched larvae are fed eggs, causing fluctuations in brood demography and forming cohorts of offspring. The basic feedback mechanisms produce emergent colony-level properties such as synchronized development of the brood and mature nest size. Results suggest that it is incorrect to imply colony decline from lack of nest growth, and that production of waves of offspring can be interpreted as the inevitable result of these simple feedback mechanisms rather than the solution to ultimate optimality criteria. Simulations using the parameters estimated in Polistes dominulus Christ are compared to studies of live wasps to test the validity of the model. Comparing simulated results with a perturbation experiment in nature suggests that feedback relationships establish a system that is robust and resilient against severe disturbance. Received: 20 January 1996/Accepted after revision: 27 April 1996  相似文献   

20.
The effects of body size and suspension density on filtration rates, assimilation efficiencies and respiration rates in the ribbed musselAulacomya ater (Molina) have been determined by means of short-term laboratory experiments. Filtration rates accelerate rapidly in response to increasing algal concentration up to approximately 10×106 cellsDunaliella primolecta l-1, beyond which a plateau is approached. Percentage increments are greatest in small individuals. Assimilation efficiencies are independent of body size, but decline rapidly with increasing ration to approach zero above 32×106 cells l-1. Increases in respiration rate accompany increments in filtration rate in all but the smallest size class tested. Filtration, assimilation efficiency and respiration measurements are used to calculate ingestion rations, assimilation rations and scope for growth for mussels of different sizes over a range of algal concentrations. Scope for growth, expressed as percentage change in body energy per day, is a declining function of body size, but larger individuals achieve their maximum growth rates at lower ration levels than smaller ones. Growth efficiency is independent of body size, and is maximal at 5×106 cells l-1, where 29 to 43% of ingested ration is converted into body energy. The applicability of these experimental results to natural ecosystems is discussed.  相似文献   

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