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Feeding response of Nyctiphanes australis (Euphausiacea) to various nanoplankton sizes and taxaGraeme J. Haywood*, Carolyn W. BurnsDepartment of Zoology, University of Otago, Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand![]() ABSTRACT: Nanoplankton (2 to 20 µm) are a substantial fraction of the plankton in the sea, where they form a potential food source for zooplankton. Monocultures of 12 nanoplankton taxa of different cell size and 1 species of Thalassiosira (microplankton) were offered to Nyctiphanes australis to determine whether they would be consumed and, if so, determine rates of clearance and ingestion by the euphausiid. N. australis ingested very small cells (3.5 to 5.4 µm equivalent spherical diameter) at rates ≤5 x 105 cells h-1. A total of 8 nanoplankton taxa were consumed at rates that provided N. australis with its minimum food requirement of 2% body carbon d-1, and so could maintain it when microplankton abundance is low. Our results suggest that N. australis can detect and avoid unpalatable food such as the chlorophytes Dunaliella and Nannochloris, but is susceptible to the toxic dinoflagellate Alexandrium minutum.
KEY WORDS: Zooplankton · Nanoplankton · Ingestion rate
Published in MEPS Vol.
253
(2003) on May 15
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