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Polar night ecology of a pelagic predator,the chaetognath Parasagitta elegans
Authors:Jordan J. Grigor  Stig Falk-Petersen  Øystein Varpe
Affiliation:1.Takuvik Joint International Laboratory,Université Laval,Québec,Canada;2.Québec-Océan, Université Laval,Québec,Canada;3.Département de Biologie,Université Laval,Québec,Canada;4.University Centre in Svalbard,Longyearbyen,Norway;5.Akvaplan-niva, Fram Centre,Troms?,Norway;6.Faculty of Biosciences, Fisheries and Economics,University of Troms?,Troms?,Norway;7.Norwegian Polar Institute, Fram Centre,Troms?,Norway
Abstract:The annual routines and seasonal ecology of herbivorous zooplankton species are relatively well known due to their tight coupling with their pulsed food source, the primary production. For higher trophic levels of plankton, these seasonal interactions are less well understood. Here, we study the mid-winter feeding of chaetognaths in high-Arctic fjord ecosystems. Chaetognaths are planktivorous predators which comprise high biomass in high-latitude seas. We investigated the common species Parasagitta elegans around the Svalbard archipelago (78–81°N) during the winters of 2012 and 2013. Our samples consisted of individuals (body lengths 9–55 mm) from three fjords, which were examined for gut contents (n = 903), stable isotopes, fatty acid composition, and maturity status (n = 352). About a quarter of the individuals contained gut contents, mainly lipid droplets and chitinous debris, whilst only 4 % contained identifiable prey, chiefly the copepods Calanus spp. and Metridia longa. The δ15N content of P. elegans, and its average trophic level of 2.9, confirmed its carnivorous position and its fatty acid profile [in particular its high levels of 20:1(n-9) and 22:1(n-11)] confirmed carnivory on Calanus. Observations of undeveloped gonads in many of the larger P. elegans, and the absence of small individuals <10 mm, suggested that reproduction had not started this early in the year. Its average feeding rate across fjords and years was 0.12 prey ind.?1 day?1, which is low compared to estimates of spring and summer feeding in high-latitude environments. Our findings suggest reduced feeding activity during winter and that predation by P. elegans had little impact on the mortality of copepods.
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