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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2018-05-09
    Description: Grazing experiments were conducted with natural mesozooplankton from Kiel Bight, Germany, using radioactive labelled phytoplankton cultures and seston size fractions. The results of experiments using phytoplankton cultures indicated that bivalve veligers performed highest clearance of particles within a size range of 4.7 to 6.3 µm, whereas optimum particle size for copepods was 15 µm. The results of experiments using labelled natural seston size fractions identified bivalve veligers and appendicularians as those responsible for the removal of particles within the smallest size class (〈2 µm). Seston size fractions larger than 5 µm were mainly cleared by copepods and nauplii. As particle size increased, the contribution of copepod clearance to total zooplankton clearance within size classes increased from 57% (〈5 µm size class) to more than 81% (30 to 100 µm size class). When the nauplii clearance rates were included, the total copepod clearance accounted for 90 to 97.6% of the total volume cleared of particles bigger than 10 µm. Despite low abundances of bivalve veligers and appendicularians in Kiel Bight at the time of the experiment, we calculated that approximately 10 and 8.5%, respectively, of the carbon ingested by total mesozooplankton was due to veliger and appendicularian grazing. The importance of bivalve veligers might be seen in their grazing on seston particles that escape predation by copepods and on the amount of energy that is therefore directed from the water column to the benthos when larvae settle.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-05-27
    Description: In a Mediterranean seagrass ecosystem (Posidonia oceanica ) around Ischia (Gulf of Naples) an attempt was made to study the fate of Posidonia derived particulate matter in wrack beds around and within the seagrass stands, on the shore and in the water column. Changes in total soluble carbohydrate concentrations from green and brown parts within one leaf vary from 70.7 to 25.7 mg.g-1 dry weight. Minimum values of 0.2 mg.g-1 dry weight consisting mainly of saccharose are detected for brown wrack particles. All other components found in green leaf parts, e.g. fructose, glucose and myo-inositol probably leach rapidly into the water or are transported into the rhizome prior to the loss of the brown leaf region. Only in the rhizome the trisaccharide raffinose was detected in addition to the components found in the leaves. The importance of the brown leaf fraction as a substrate for microheterotrophs is indicated by bacterial densities up to 4 x 104 cells.mm-2. This is correlated with nitrogen and carbon values, showing a decreasing C/N ratio with decreasing particle size, but increasing O2 uptake with maximum values of 10 mg.g-1.h-1 for the particle size fraction of 0.1 - 1 mm. The role of the brown dead Posidonia derived leaf tractions as energy source for consumers is discussed and attempts are made to redefine the terms "debris" and „detritus".
    Type: Article , NonPeerReviewed
    Format: text
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