2 research outputs found

    Effects of small-scale turbulence on growth and grazing of marine microzooplankton

    No full text
    11 pages, 5 figures, 3 tablesWe report the effects of small-scale turbulence at realistic intensity (ε = 1.1 × 10 cm s) on the growth and grazing rates of three marine heterotrophic dinoflagellates (Peridiniella danica, Gyrodinium dominans and Oxyrrhis marina) and one ciliate (Mesodinium pulex). All the dinoflagellates showed a reduction of volume-based growth rates, whereas M. pulex did not. P. danica was the most affected by small-scale turbulence, followed by G. dominans, and O. marina. Turbulence slightly increased O. marina ingestion rates, but this increase was not statistically significant. G. dominans and M. pulex ingestion rates were modestly lower under turbulence, and P. danica completely ceased feeding in turbulent treatments. Gross growth efficiencies of G. dominans and O. marina were negatively affected by turbulence, whereas they remained unaltered for M. pulex. P. danica feeding and growth rates in the presence of turbulence were close to zero. Overall, there was a negative relationship between the effects of turbulence on ingestion rates and the time needed to process a prey item. Neglecting the effects of turbulence in microzooplankton grazing estimates in the field could produce biased approximations of their impacts on primary producersProjects PROTOS (CTM2009-08783) and FERMI (CGL2014-59227-R) from the Spanish Ministry of Economy, Industry and Competitiveness (co-financed with FEDER funds from the EU). R.A.M. was funded by a PhD fellowship from the National Commission of Science (CONICYT), Ministry of Education, ChilePeer Reviewe
    corecore