A preliminary investigation of zooplankton diapausing eggs from waterbird faecal droppings in New Zealand

IF 1.4 4区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 FISHERIES New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research Pub Date : 2023-10-04 DOI:10.1080/00288330.2023.2264226
Kelly M. Jamieson, Ian C. Duggan
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Abstract

We analysed internal dispersal of zooplankton by waterbirds (endozoochory) in New Zealand, quantifying zooplankton eggs in faecal droppings collected at two lakes, Lake Rotoroa (Hamilton) and Lake Rotorua. Sixty-seven faecal droppings were collected from Mallard Ducks (20), Canada Geese (11), Greylag Geese (6), Black Swans (20) and Australian Coots (10). Fifty eggs were found, with a mean of 0.75 eggs per dropping, indicating that waterbirds consume zooplankton eggs, and that these pass through the digestive system. No significant difference was observed in the abundance of eggs among waterbird species, and no eggs hatched in the laboratory. Our results suggest that waterbird dispersal of zooplankton in New Zealand is occurring, but numbers being transported are low. Further, as non-native waterbirds such as mallard ducks and geese do not migrate in New Zealand to the extent they do elsewhere, they are likely not primary vectors for zooplankton dispersal.
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新西兰水鸟粪便中浮游动物滞育卵的初步调查
我们分析了新西兰水鸟(endodochory)对浮游动物的内部扩散,并对在罗托鲁阿湖(Hamilton)和罗托鲁阿湖(Lake Rotorua)两个湖泊收集的粪便中的浮游动物卵进行了量化。从绿头鸭(20只)、加拿大鹅(11只)、灰鹅(6只)、黑天鹅(20只)和澳大利亚白骨顶(10只)中收集了67只粪便。他们发现了50个蛋,平均每次落下0.75个蛋,这表明水鸟吃浮游动物的蛋,这些蛋通过消化系统。不同种类水鸟的卵丰度无显著差异,实验室也未发现有卵孵化。我们的研究结果表明,新西兰正在发生水鸟传播浮游动物的现象,但传播的数量很少。此外,由于野鸭、鸭和鹅等非本地水鸟不像在其他地方那样迁徙到新西兰,它们很可能不是浮游动物扩散的主要媒介。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
12.50%
发文量
35
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Aims: The diversity of aquatic environments in the southern continents and oceans is of worldwide interest to researchers and resource managers in research institutions, museums, and other centres. The New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research plays an important role in disseminating information on observational, experimental, theoretical and numerical research on the marine, estuarine and freshwater environments of the region.
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