Density and biomass of two copepod size fractions and various species obtained during Almirante Irizar cruises to the Drake Passage and Scotia Sea (2000-2003)


Autoria(s): Thompson, Gustavo A; Dinofrio, Estela O; Alder, Viviana A
Cobertura

MEDIAN LATITUDE: -58.500000 * MEDIAN LONGITUDE: -54.000000 * SOUTH-BOUND LATITUDE: -59.000000 * WEST-BOUND LONGITUDE: -62.000000 * NORTH-BOUND LATITUDE: -58.000000 * EAST-BOUND LONGITUDE: -46.000000

Data(s)

19/11/2012

Resumo

The relative importance of small forms of copepods has been historically underestimated by the traditional use of 200-300-µm mesh nets. This work quantified the distribution and abundance of copepods, considering two size fractions (<300 µm and >300 µm), in superficial waters (9 m deep) of the Drake Passage and contributed to the knowledge of their interannual fluctuations among three summers. Four types of nauplii and eleven species of copepods at copepodite and adult stages were identified, with abundance values of up to 13 ind/L and 28,300 µg C/m**3. The <300-µm fraction, composed of Oithona similis, small cyclopoids and nauplii, dominated the copepod communities in the 3 years; it accounted for more than 77% of the total number and for between 40 and 63% of the total biomass. Changes in density and biomass values among the three cruises differed according to copepod size fraction and water mass; the >300-µm fraction showed no changes among the 3 years, both in Antarctic (density and biomass) and in Subantarctic waters (density), whereas the <300-µm fraction showed higher (density and biomass) values in 2001 both in Subantarctic and in Antarctic waters. Sea surface temperature and its anomaly accounted for the largest proportion of variability in copepod density and biomass, particularly for the <300-µm fraction.

Formato

application/zip, 3 datasets

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.839142

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.839142

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Direitos

CC-BY: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Thompson, Gustavo A; Dinofrio, Estela O; Alder, Viviana A (2011): Interannual fluctuations in copepod abundance and contribution of small forms in the Drake Passage during austral summer. Helgoland Marine Research, 66(2), 127-138, doi:10.1007/s10152-011-0253-4

Palavras-Chave #<300 µm, average; <300 µm, max; >300 µm, average; >300 µm, max; all, average; all, max; average; C. acutus; C. acutus C; C. citer; C. citer C; C. laticeps; C. laticeps C; C. simillimus; C. simillimus C; Calanoides acutus; Calanoides acutus, biomass as carbon; Calanus simillimus; Calanus simillimus, biomass as carbon; Clausocalanus laticeps; Clausocalanus laticeps, biomass as carbon; contribution <300 µm (biomass); contribution <300 µm (density); contribution >300 µm (biomass); contribution >300 µm (density); Copepoda; Copepoda, biomass as carbon; Copepoda, nauplii; Copepoda, nauplii, biomass as carbon; Copepoda C; Copepoda naup; Copepoda naup C; Ctenocalanus citer; Ctenocalanus citer, biomass as carbon; DrakeP-ScotiaS; International Polar Year (2007-2008); IPY; M. gerlachei; M. gerlachei C; M. norvegica; M. norvegica C; max; Metridia gerlachei; Metridia gerlachei, biomass as carbon; Microsetella norvegica; Microsetella norvegica, biomass as carbon; N; O. curvata; O. curvata C; O. similis; O. similis C; Oithona similis; Oithona similis, biomass as carbon; Oncaea curvata; Oncaea curvata, biomass as carbon; P. antartica; P. antartica C; Paraeuchaeta antartica; Paraeuchaeta antartica, biomass as carbon; Perc; Percentage; R. gigas; R. gigas C; Rhincalanus gigas; Rhincalanus gigas, biomass as carbon; S. longiceps; S. longiceps C; Sample amount; Sampling date; Sapphirina sp.; Sapphirina sp., biomass as carbon; Sapphirina sp. C; Southern Ocean; Subeucalanus longiceps; Subeucalanus longiceps, biomass as carbon; Water bodies
Tipo

Dataset