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Trophic strategies of euphausiids in a low-latitude ecosystem
Authors:S T Kinsey  T L Hopkins
Institution:(1) Department of Marine Science, University of South Florida, 140 Seventh Avenue S.E., 33701-5016 St. Petersburg, Florida, USA;(2) Present address: Department of Biological Science, B-157, The Florida State University, 32306-3050 Tallahassee, Florida, USA
Abstract:Vertical distribution, diet, and morphology of adults were examined in 27 species of euphausiids occurring in the upper 1000 m in the eastern Gulf of Mexico. Vertical distribution patterns were similar to those found in the central ocean gyres and oceanic equatorial waters of the Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Oceans. Most species migrated vertically from their daytime depths of 300 to 600 m to the upper 300 m at night. Exceptions were the non-migrating species of Stylocheiron, which remained in the epipelagic zone day and night, and Nematobrachion boopis, which remained in the mesopelagic zone. Based on gut-contents analysis, the Gulf euphausiids were largely zooplanktivorous, with cyclopoid and calanoid copepods being the most common items in stomachs. ostracods were especially common in the stomachs of Thysanopoda spp. and phytoplankton in the guts of Euphausia spp. Nearly every species' diet contained a considerable amount of olive-colored debris, which may have been marine snow generated in the epipelagic zone. Cluster analysis grouped the euphausiids into nine diet guilds. Euphausiids with a generalized morphology (i.e., spherical eyes, uniform thoracic appendages) tended to group together and demonstrated little variety in stomach contents among species. Euphausiids with a specialized morphology (i.e., bilobed eyes, elongate thoracic appendages) showed considerable variety in stomach contents among species, and several species had diets that were highly specific. Many of the species that had similar gut contents fed on prey of different sizes, as indicated by the width of the calanoid copepod mandibles found in stomachs. Principal-components analysis of seven morphological characters yielded species groups that were similar, but not identical, to those generated by cluster analysis of stomach contents data. We inferred from this that morphological characters partly determine diet, but that behavior is also important. Using the 20 most abundant species and 3 niche parameters, we attempted to identify the degree of separation among euphausiids based on the level of overlap in vertical distribution and diet composition, and on differences in mean prey size. Overlap of <60% in vertical distribution or diet composition was considered to indicate distinction of that parameter. Of 190 total species pairs, only 4 pairs did not demonstrate niche separation in at least one of these categories. We found that differences in these niche parameters were greatest among species with a specialized morphology and least among species that were morphologically generalized.
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