TAXA COMPOSITION AND BIOMASS OF THE SURFACE-DWELLING CRUSTACEANS DURING SPRING PYCNOCLINE FORMATION IN AUKE BAY, SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA

Authors
Citation
Aj. Paul et Ko. Coyle, TAXA COMPOSITION AND BIOMASS OF THE SURFACE-DWELLING CRUSTACEANS DURING SPRING PYCNOCLINE FORMATION IN AUKE BAY, SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA, Journal of crustacean biology, 13(3), 1993, pp. 594-600
Citations number
12
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology
ISSN journal
02780372
Volume
13
Issue
3
Year of publication
1993
Pages
594 - 600
Database
ISI
SICI code
0278-0372(1993)13:3<594:TCABOT>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
The crustacean-dominated zooplankton community that lives in the upper 5 m of water in one of southeastern Alaska's bays was monitored befor e and after spring pycnocline formation. Zooplankton abundance and wet weight biomass in the upper 5 m of the surface layer reached peak val ues of 50,000 m-3 and 2.5 g m-3, respectively. Surface populations wer e dominated by barnacle nauplii, with substantial contributions by the copepods Pseudocalanus spp., Acartia spp., and Centropages abdominali s. Barnacle nauplii were only a minor component of the zooplankton in whole water-column samples. Surface zooplankton abundance and biomass were higher at night than during the day in April and early May, prior to stabilization of the water column. The day versus night difference s were primarily due to diurnal vertical migration by barnacle nauplii . Obvious diurnal differences in abundance and biomass of zooplankton at the sea surface were not detected after pycnocline formation. After pycnocline formation, copepod biomass in the upper 5 m was about 5 ti mes higher than that of the integrated water column. This may explain why many young fishes congregate in the surface layer to feed.