The Black Sea Zooplankton Mortality, Decomposition, and Sedimentation Measurements Using Vital Dye and Short-Term Sediment Traps

The principal objectives of this research are to measure the non-consumptive mortality rate of marine copepod zooplankton and the sedimentation rate of copepod carcasses, using short-term sediment traps, and to reveal a correlation between the rates of the two competitive processes—sedimentation and...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Daria Litvinyuk, Vladimir Mukhanov, Vladislav Evstigneev
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2022-07-01
Series:Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/10/8/1031
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Summary:The principal objectives of this research are to measure the non-consumptive mortality rate of marine copepod zooplankton and the sedimentation rate of copepod carcasses, using short-term sediment traps, and to reveal a correlation between the rates of the two competitive processes—sedimentation and degradation of the carcasses under turbulent mixing conditions. The traps were moored in Sevastopol Bay and adjacent coastal waters (the Black Sea) during summer and autumn seasons. A simulation model was developed to describe a wide range of processes in the trap and the water column above it and to interpret the results obtained with the sediment traps. Significant changes in the abundance of copepod carcasses (from 280 to 12,443 ind. m<sup>−3</sup>) and their fraction in the total zooplankton abundance (53 to 81%) were observed in the waters over short time periods, indicating a high variability of zooplankton mortality, sedimentation, and decomposition rates. Despite the high concentrations of copepod carcasses in the water column, the rates of their accumulation in the traps proved to be extremely low, which could be due to intense turbulent mixing of the waters. The carcass sedimentation rate and the flow of swimmers (motile copepods) into the traps were significantly higher in waters subjected to weaker turbulent mixing. The obtained estimates of the sedimentation rate of copepod carcasses (0.012 to 0.39 d<sup>−1</sup>) were comparable in value with the rate of their microbial decomposition (0.13 and 0.05 d<sup>−1</sup> in the bay and adjacent waters, respectively). This confirmed the hypothesis on microbial decomposition as one of the key controls of the fraction of live zooplankton organisms in zooplankton.
ISSN:2077-1312