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Copepod grazing impact on the trophic structure of the microbial assemblage of the San Pedro Channel, California
Authors:Schnetzer  Astrid; Caron  David A
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California, 3616 Trousdale Parkway, Los Angeles, CA 90089-0371, USA
Abstract:In August 2002 and March 2003 the trophic structure of the microbialassemblage from the San Pedro Channel, California was studiedfollowing the experimental alteration of the number of copepods.Changes in the abundance/biomass of microorganisms <80 µmduring 3-day incubations were monitored in (i) the absence ofmetazoa >80 µm, (ii) the presence of natural abundancesof metazoa and (iii) the presence of an elevated number of copepods.Prokaryotes and small-sized eukaryotes (<4 µm) dominatedplankton biomass during both experimental months. Diatoms numericallydominated the 10–80 µm plankton in August 2002,but ciliate and heterotrophic dinoflagellate biomass generallyexceeded diatom biomass on both dates. Ingestion of protozooplankton(predominantly ciliates) contributed substantially to copepoddaily carbon rations. The adult copepod assemblage removed 4.6and 36% per day of the microzooplankton standing stocks (10–80µm size fraction) in August and March, respectively. Elevatedcopepod grazing pressure on protozooplankton resulted in increasedbiomass of nanoplankton (<5 µm) presumably via a trophiccascade. Accordingly, the copepod–protozoan trophic linkappears to be a key factor structuring the planktonic microbialassemblage in the San Pedro Channel. This paper is one of six on the subject of the role of zooplanktonpredator–prey interactions in structuring plankton communities.
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