EFFECT OF FOOD QUALITY ON RATE OF GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PELAGIC COPEPOD PSEUDOCALANUS-ELONGATUS (COPEPODA, CALANOIDA)

Citation
M. Koski et al., EFFECT OF FOOD QUALITY ON RATE OF GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE PELAGIC COPEPOD PSEUDOCALANUS-ELONGATUS (COPEPODA, CALANOIDA), Marine ecology. Progress series, 170, 1998, pp. 169-187
Citations number
103
Categorie Soggetti
Marine & Freshwater Biology",Ecology
ISSN journal
01718630
Volume
170
Year of publication
1998
Pages
169 - 187
Database
ISI
SICI code
0171-8630(1998)170:<169:EOFQOR>2.0.ZU;2-Z
Abstract
Rates of body growth, development and egg production of Pseudocalanus elongatus were measured in the laboratory, in relation to the taxonomy and physiology of algal food. Four types of experiments were performe d to measure the copepod's response to (1) 7 algal species of similar size and shape, but different taxonomic groups, (2) inferior food spec ies that were offered with good food as a check of toxicity, (3) nitro gen Limitation and the growth rate oi food species, and (4) highly uns aturated fatty acids that were supplied with inferior food to test for lack of essential fatty acids. Grazing was measured to check that the offered food was really ingested. The best food species proved to be Rhodomonas sp., which induced a fast rate of development, good somatic growth and egg production and low mortality. The development rate was almost equally fast with Thalassiosira weissflogii, Gymnodinium simpl ex and Tetraselmis suecica, but the rates of somatic growth or egg pro duction were lower and mortality generally higher than with Rhodomonas sp. Three algal species, Dunaliella sp., Amphidinium sp. and Chrysoch romulina polylepis, were poor food; copepod development was not comple ted, the rates of somatic growth and egg production were low and morta lity was high. Ingestion was equally high with most of the species; on ly C, polylepis was not eaten. No clear toxic effects were found when the 3 poor-food species were offered in mixtures with Rhodomonas sp. N -limited Rhodomonas sp, did not reduce the rate of copepod development in comparison to a N-replete culture; however, N-limited T. weissflog ii reduced the development rate to the low level of poor-food species. No effect of different growth rates of Dunaliella sp, was found. Lipi ds rich in highly unsaturated fatty acids supplied with Dunaliella sp, did not substantially improve the slow development and low egg produc tion observed with this species. The weight-specific somatic growth ra te was always higher than the weight-specific egg production rate, esp ecially with less optimal food, which seems to hamper the estimation o f the secondary production of copepods based on egg production alone. It is concluded that large differences in the food quality of differen t algal species are due to differences in digestibility or in mineral and biochemical composition.