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Hopkins, T.L. & J.J. Torres. (1988). The Zooplankton Community in the Vicinity of the Ice Edge, Western Weddell Sea, March 1986. Polar Biology. 9(2): 79-87.
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Hopkins, T.L. & J.J. Torres
1988
The Zooplankton Community in the Vicinity of the Ice Edge, Western Weddell Sea, March 1986.
Polar Biology
9(2): 79-87.
Publication
Ant'Phipoda Literature database
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The zooplankton community in the vicinity of the ice edge in the west central Weddell Sea was investigated in the late austral summer (March 1986). Sampling was done with two ships operating concurrently, one in the pack ice and the other in the adjcent open sea. Metazoan microzooplankton (<1 mm) was most abundant in the epipelagic zone. It consisted mostly of copepod nauplii and copepods of the genera Oithona, Oncaea, Ctenocalanus and Microcalanus. While species composition was similar in both areas, vertical patterns differed in that the microzooplankton had sparse populations in the upper 50 m under the ice. This may have been related to water temperature which in the upper 50 m under the ice was more than 1°C cooler than in the open sea. Zooplankton in the 1–20 mm size range was dominated by the calanoid copepods Metridia gerlachei, Calanus propinquus and Calanoides acutus which constituted half the biomass in the upper 1000 m. Their populations had highest densities in the upper 150 m, though much of the C. acutus population resided below 300 m. Metridia gerlachei and C. propinquus underwent diel vertical migrations in both areas whereas C. acutus did not migrate. Species diversity in the epipelagic zone was moderate and the fauna was characterized by species typical of the oceanic east wind drift. Diversity increased with depth and was due primarily to the appearance of circumpolar mesopelagic copepods in Weddell Warm Deep Water. Biomass of 1–20 mm zooplankton in the 0–1000 m zone was low (1.1–1.3 gDWm-2) compared to other Southern Ocean areas investigated with comparable methods. It is suggested that this is related to Weddell circulation patterns and the resulting low annual primary production in the central Weddell Sea.
Antarctic
Weddell Sea
Ecology
Plankton
Zooplankton
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