Inter-Research
MEPS
Home
Editors
Forthcoming
Information
Subscribe
Journals
Home
MEPS
AME
CR
DAO
Search
Subscribe
Books
Top Books
EE Books
Order
ECI
Home
EEIU
Home
| |
MEPS 186:31-42 (1999)
|
Abstract
|

Influence of plankton community structure on the contribution of bacterial production to metazooplankton in a coastal mesocosm
Hiroshi Koshikawa1,*, Shigeki Harada1, Masataka Watanabe1, Kazuhiro Kogure2, Teru Ioriya3, Kunio Kohata1, Toshihiko Kimura1, Kazumi Sato4, Takashi Akehata4
1National Institute for Environmental Studies, 16-2 Onogawa, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0053, Japan 2Ocean Research Institute, University of Tokyo, 1-15-1, Minamidai, Nakano-ku, Tokyo 164-8639, Japan 3Laboratory of
Phycology, Tokyo University of Fisheries, 4-5-7 Konan, Minato-ku, Tokyo 108-8477, Japan 4Department of Industrial Chemistry, Science University of Tokyo, 1-3 Kagurazaka, Shinjuku-ku, Tokyo 162-0825, Japan
*E-mail: koshikaw@nies.go.jp

ABSTRACT: To understand energy passing from bacterial production to metazooplankton in an aquatic ecosystem, the relative significance of bacterial and photosynthetic production as carbon sources for metazooplankton was determined in a 14 d coastal
mesocosm experiment, using frequent in situ batch incubations with dissolved organic and inorganic 13C tracers. The contribution ratio (CR) of bacterial to photosynthetic production as metazooplankton food resources fluctuated from 6 to
41%, according to successional changes in the plankton community structure in the mesocosm. The lowest CR (6%) occurred when nano-sized autotrophs were highly abundant and appendicularians Oikopleura sp., which are capable of ingesting only pico-
to nano-sized particles, increased rapidly. After these small autotrophs disappeared, the CR increased to 30-40%, suggesting that the appendicularians were supported largely by bacterial production at that time. When the metazooplankton consisted mainly
of copepods, the CR reached about 10% despite the relatively low ratio (ca 15%) of net bacterial community production to photosynthesis; also, the copepods would have been able to exploit bacterial production only through intermediaries such as
bacterivorous protists. In this period with copepods dominant, Gymnodinium mikimotoi was the dominant autotroph and might have been a main source of prey for grazers. However, copepods avoid this dinoflagellate, as often reported.
Consequently, not much of the autotrophic production of the dinoflagellate might have been ingested by the copepods. We conducted that nano-sized autotrophs and herbivorous protists were likely to be the main suppliers of photosynthetic production for
copepods, as nano-sized bacterivores were the suppliers of bacterial production. These findings suggest that bacterial production and the carbon pathway, i.e. a microbial loop, are not always the terminus of organic carbon flow in food webs, but can be an
integral component of the food pool for metazooplankton in the coastal environment.
KEY WORDS: Microbial loop · Appendicularians · Copepods · Mesocosm

Published in MEPS Vol.
186
(1999) on September 17
ISSN: 0171-8630.
Copyright © Inter-Research, Oldendorf/Luhe, 1999
|