首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Changes in the composition of planktonic ostracod populations across a range of latitudes in the North-east Atlantic
Authors:Martin V Angel  Kasia Blachowiak-Samolyk  Ruth Castillo
Institution:a National Oceanographic Centre, Southampton University, Southampton SO14 3ZN, UK
b Arctic Ecology Group, Institute of Oceanology, Polish Academy of Sciences, 81-712 SOPOT, Powstancow Warszawy 55, Poland
c Plankton Department, Institute of Biology of the Southern Seas (IBSS), Ukrainian Academy of Sciences, Nakhimov Avenue 2, 99011 Sevastopol, Ukraine
d University of Bremen, International Studies on Aquatic Tropical Ecology, Germany
Abstract:A large database representing the bathymetric distribution of 117 species of halocyprid ostracods has been compiled from seven stations forming a transect from the equator to 60°N along 20°W, plus an additional station at 32°N, 65°W. This data base is analysed to examine the latitudinal and bathymetric changes in species composition and diversity of assemblages of this important, yet neglected, holoplanktonic group. At each station stratified sampling of the complete water column from the surface down mostly to 2000 m was carried out both day and night. Each sample resulted from the filtration of at least 2500 m3 of water and was analysed using a consistent protocol. The differences between the day and night profiles are attributable to diel vertical migrations, to local-scale heterogeneity, and possibly to a degree of net avoidance. There is a gradient of increasing species richness and diversity from high to low latitudes. By day, halocyprids are either infrequent or absent from the upper 50 m of the water column, but at night after diel vertical migration they become quite abundant in the epipelagic zone, particularly at low latitudes. Bathymetric profiles show ostracod abundances increase rapidly below the thermocline, reaching maxima at 200-400 m and then declining by at least an order of magnitude at 2000 m. Diversity (both species richness, H′ and evenness, J) also increases below the thermocline and thereafter is either maintained or declines only slightly to 2000 m. There are no relationships among diversity, abundance and productivity, but analysis of the whole database shows that the changes in community structure are consistent with Longhurst’s Longhurst, A.R., 1998. Ecological Geography of the Sea. Academic Press, San Diego, pp. xiv, 398.] biogeochemical provinces.
Keywords:North Atlantic  Zoogeography  Diversity  Zooplankton  Ostracoda  Bathymetry
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号