Title: Diel Vertical Migration
1Diel Vertical Migration
2Why Did Vertical Migration Evolve?
- Seek Optimal light intensity but why??
- Avoid visual predators
- Utilization of different water masses (Hardy
1956) - Energy conservation (McLaren 1963)
- Optimization of food (Enright 1977)
- Ladder of migration (larger plankton and nekton)
3Heterogeneity basis
Nutrients PP ZP Fish
Bottom up Top down
4Density-dependent feeding
5Assimilation efficiency assimilated
ingested waste ingested
assimilated
pp concentration ?
6Is zooplankton mortality food-dependent?
7Lag time and positive feedback loops
8Nutrients PP ZP Fish
Critical factors affecting phytoplankton
production-PS, growth rates, maintenance of
biomass Bottom up - nutrient and light
limits Top down predation, competitoin
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10Ocean ecosystem classic model -
- PS phytoplankton production- copepods
predators detritus - Pacific tightly coupled copepods graze most
of plankton, production and energy in pelagic
fish - Atlantic, loosely coupled, production and energy
in benthic fish via debris
11Ultra and Nanoplankton lt 30 microns,
Bacterioplankton, flagellates, cocoliths Diatoms,
dinoflagellate driven model still holds for
upwelling, coastal waters. Why is this
recent? Can account for 75 biomass, 80
production in epipelagic oceanic zone Production
population size not seasonally variable. Esp
tropics, gyres why there ? Advantage to small
size? Low nutrients gts/v, lt needs, protist
symbionts in larger planktonic protozoa
12Bacterioplankton
- DOC huge reservoir, stable
- But ¼ of PS fixed C is leaked as DOM -
??cont. production of C vs stable amt? Where does
it go? Why not build up? - Up to 50 of total ocean production via direct
bacterial uptake (DOM particles living and
dead) - Bacterioplankton ext. abundant 0.4 micron
- lost production really recycled via bacteria
into food chain - refractory DOM humic acids, lignins
- Dynamic DOM amino acids, sugars, vitamins
- High turnover used by auxotrophs, heterotrophs
-
13Nano food web
- Macro phyto production DOM by leakage and
lysis, plus photosynthesis, drives nano loop
regenerates/creates nutrients - Bacterioplankton lt 1 micron 90 DOM uptake,
60-65 assimilation efficiency - High efficiency convert DOM into POC
- Nano biomassgtgt macro phyto plankton
- Predators - ciliates, non-photo flagellates
- Consume most nanoplankton production, consumed by
macro plankton
14Sources of DOM
- PP cells are inherently leaky
- - normal, healthy cells exude 1-20 of fixed
carbon - - senescent cells even more leaky
- Autolysis /or bursting of old, injured,
virus-infected cells - Exudates to serve functional need of cell
- - auxotrophs to attract vitamin-producers
- - competitive interference
- - water conditioners
15Sources of DOM
- Loss during ingestion
- - zp sloppy eaters, especially high grazing rate
areas - Excretion
- - about 10 of C ingested
- Bacteria regenerate nutrients in low nutrient
waters
16DOM Utilization
- Direct primarily bacteria, but some zooplankton
- Indirect extra links in ignored food chain
- microbial loop
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180.06
0.6
6
60
100
19Marine snow organic aggregates
- Air bubbles breaking
- Adsorption to silt particles, salt crystals
- Cast off molt skins, mucus nets, fecal pellets,
etc. - Intense sites of bacterial decomposition,
nutrient recycling
20Paradox of the Plankton
how can so many species coexist in a seemingly
homogeneous ocean?
- Te time between environmental changes
- Tc time to competitive exclusion
- Tc lt Te Tc gt Te Tc Te
21Are the Oceans Homogeneous?
22- Small-scale patchiness
- Marine snow
- Microturbulence
- Vertical differences in light, other factors
- Moderate-scale patchiness
- Coastal fronts
- Langmuir circulation
- Ocean eddies or rings
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25- Large-scale patchiness
- Major continental upwelling zones
- Equatorial upwelling zones
- Current convergence zone
- Major ocean gyre systems
26- Biological Interactions (top down)
- Grazing
- Variations in reproductive rate
- Social behavior
- Interspecific interactions that attract or repulse