similar patterns of patterns of community organization characterize distinct groups of different trophic levels in the plankton of the nw mediterranean sea

similar patterns of patterns of community organization characterize distinct groups of different trophic levels in the plankton of the nw mediterranean sea

;V. Raybaud;A. Tunin-Ley;M. E. Ritchie;J. R. Dolan
tetrahedron letters 2009 Vol. 6 pp. 431-438
140
raybaud2009biogeosciencessimilar

Abstract

Planktonic populations were sampled over a 4 week period in the NW Mediterranean, at a site subject to little vertical advection during the Dynaproc 2 cruise in 2004. The characteristics of the phytoplankton, the tintinnid community and the zooplankton have recently been described in detail. Based on these studies, we compared the characteristics of 3 well-circumscribed assemblages of different trophic levels: <i>Ceratium</i> of the phytoplankton, herbivorous tintinnids of the microzooplankton, and large (&gt;500 &mu;m) omnivorous and carnivorous copepods of the metazoan zooplankton. In all three groups, diversity as H' or species richness, was less variable than concentration of organisms. Plotting time against species accumulation, the curves approached plateau values for <i>Ceratium</i> spp, tintinnids and large copepods but only a small number of species were consistently present (core species) and these accounted for most of the populations. For <i>Ceratium</i> core species numbered 10, for tintinnids 11 species, and for large copepods, core species numbered 4 during the day and 16 at night. <i>Ceratium</i>, tintinnids and large copepods showed some similar patterns of community structure in terms of species abundance distributions. <i>Ceratium</i> species were distributed in a log-normal pattern. Tintinnid species showed a log-series distribution. Large copepod assemblages were highly dominated with night samples showing much higher abundances and greater species richness than day samples. However, species abundance distributions were similar between day and night and were mostly log-normal. The paradox of the plankton, describing phytoplankton communities as super-saturated with species, extends to the microzooplankton and zooplankton.

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