Feeding of Sagitta enflata and vertical distribution of chaetognaths in relation to low oxygen concentrations |
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Authors: | Giesecke, Ricardo Gonzalez, Humberto E. |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Marine Biology Jürgen Winter, Universidad Austral De Chile, PO Box 567, Valdivia, Chile and Center of Oceanographic Research in the Eastern South-Pacific (COPAS) |
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Abstract: | ![]() Zooplankton samples were collected in Mejillones Bay, northernChile (23°00'15'S, 70°26'43'W ). Sampling was conductedat 4 h intervals, for 24 h during three seasons, austral spring(October 2000), summer ( January 2001) and winter (August 2001)at three different strata (025, 2550 and 50100m). Five species of chaetognaths were collected. Sagitta enflatawas the most abundant species, representing up to 65% of allchaetognaths in total numbers, followed by Sagitta bierii, makingup 34% of the total abundance of chaetognaths. S. enflata wasdistributed mainly above the Oxygen Minimum Zone, while S. bieriiremained below this zone. Feeding rates were relatively constantwithin the upper layer (025 m depth), for each samplingdate, averaging 1.2 prey S. enflata day1, and decreasingwith depth. Gut content analyses demonstrated that predationwas principally focused on small copepods (<1500 µm),with greatest feeding activity occurring at night. The dailypredation impact on the total standing stock of small copepodsvaried seasonally between 6% in spring and 0.4% in winter. Thispercentage may represent a negligible impact on the entire copepodcommunity, but it is relevant at the species or genus level,since S. enflata removed more than 20% of the standing stockof Centropages brachiatus and Corycaeus sp. Thus, during someperiods of the year, chaetognaths may strongly influence theabundance and size distribution of copepods in coastal upwellingecosystems. |
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