浮游生物的模式——Agulhas河岸桡足类的空间分布和长期变异

IF 2.3 3区 地球科学 Q2 OCEANOGRAPHY Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography Pub Date : 2023-04-01 DOI:10.1016/j.dsr2.2023.105265
Jenny A. Huggett , Margaux Noyon , Jacob Carstensen , David R. Walker
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Current and cruise-feeding herbivores <em>C. agulhensis</em> and the smaller Para- and Clausocalanidae collectively accounted for 73% and 54% of total copepod biomass and abundance respectively, driving the main patterns for total biomass. <em>C. agulhensis</em> copepodites showed an ontogenetic shift in distribution with distance offshore and downstream from the cold ridge, and accumulation of older stages near the southern tip of the bank. The upwelling specialist <em>Calanoides natalis</em><span> was closely associated with shelf-edge upwelling, particularly near the Agulhas Bight, but was low in biomass compared to the Benguela upwelling system. The current/cruise-feeding detritivores </span><span><em>Metridia</em><em> lucens</em></span> and the Oncaeidae were largely associated with the western sector of the bank but showed different niche preferences. <em>M. lucens</em><span><span> inhabited the chl-rich outer bank of the western Agulhas Bank (WAB), likely a continuation of the southern Benguela upwelling system community, while oncaeid biomass was associated with deeper thermoclines across the WAB and western part of the CAB that often feature accumulations of the </span>gelatinous zooplankton they feed on. </span><em>Centropages</em> spp. and the Oithonidae, mainly omnivorous ambush feeders, were associated with the inner to mid-shelf region of the WAB and CAB, away from the main influence of the Agulhas Current. <em>Centropages</em> biomass aligned well with elevated chl <em>a</em> on the inner WAB, likely an extension of the Benguela community (<em>C. brachiatus</em>), and with the cold ridge over the inner CAB shelf, matching earlier patterns linked to <em>C. chierchiae</em>. Oithonidae were widespread but low in biomass, and scarce over the Agulhas Current-influenced outer shelf, suggesting a suboptimal environment overall for this group compared to the cooler Benguela upwelling region. Current-feeding and omnivorous <em>Pleuromamma</em> spp., known to be deep vertical migrators, were concentrated beyond the WAB shelf edge. Total copepod biomass showed a significant decline over the entire Agulhas Bank during the 24-year time series, as did all stages of <em>C. agulhensis</em><span>, including large nauplii, and the small calanoids (Paracalanidae and Clausocalanidae). No long-term trends were observed for the other copepod taxa. We found no trends in temperature, but a significant but weak (1.5% yr</span><sup>−1</sup>) increase in chl <em>a</em> at 30 m. Although there was no obvious shift in copepod biomass in response to the eastward shift in pelagic fish in ca. 1996, there were significant negative relationships between copepod biomass (for total copepods and <em>C. agulhensis</em><span>) and pelagic fish biomass (total, anchovy and redeye) from 1988 to 2011, with significantly lower copepod biomass after 1998 compared to before. This suggests predation pressure has an important top-down influence on copepod biomass on the Agulhas Bank. 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The current/cruise-feeding detritivores </span><span><em>Metridia</em><em> lucens</em></span> and the Oncaeidae were largely associated with the western sector of the bank but showed different niche preferences. <em>M. lucens</em><span><span> inhabited the chl-rich outer bank of the western Agulhas Bank (WAB), likely a continuation of the southern Benguela upwelling system community, while oncaeid biomass was associated with deeper thermoclines across the WAB and western part of the CAB that often feature accumulations of the </span>gelatinous zooplankton they feed on. </span><em>Centropages</em> spp. and the Oithonidae, mainly omnivorous ambush feeders, were associated with the inner to mid-shelf region of the WAB and CAB, away from the main influence of the Agulhas Current. <em>Centropages</em> biomass aligned well with elevated chl <em>a</em> on the inner WAB, likely an extension of the Benguela community (<em>C. brachiatus</em>), and with the cold ridge over the inner CAB shelf, matching earlier patterns linked to <em>C. chierchiae</em>. 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引用次数: 2

摘要

桡足类动物在非洲南部广阔的Agulhas河岸上的浮游动物群落中占主导地位,在那里它们为远洋鱼类和其他生物群提供了重要的食物资源。先前的研究表明,占主导地位的桡足类Calanus agulhensis可能占桡足类生物量的80%,与中部(CAB)和东部(EAB)Agulhas河岸上多产的冷水脊密切相关。然而,关于其他桡足类类群,以及Agulhas Bank群落是否随着时间的推移而因环境变化或其他生态系统变化而发生变化,例如最近远洋鱼类分布的东移,几乎没有可用的信息。我们利用每年春末收集的原位温度、叶绿素a(chl a)和浮游动物数据,探索1988年至2011年24年期间阿古拉斯河岸桡足类生物量和物种组成的时空变化。功能特征被用来解释观察到的模式。桡足类的总丰度和生物量集中在中部和东部陆架外部(>;100米),与30米处的叶绿素a升高区域一致,并且主要在与冷脊和海岸上升流相关的较冷地下水的下游。目前和巡航食草动物C.agulhensis和较小的Para-和Clausocalanidae分别占桡足类总生物量和丰度的73%和54%,推动了总生物量的主要模式。agulhensis桡足类在分布上随着离岸和冷脊下游的距离而发生个体发生变化,并在河岸南端附近积累了较老阶段。上升流专家Calanoides natalis与陆架边缘上升流密切相关,特别是在Agulhas湾附近,但与Benguela上升流系统相比,生物量较低。目前/巡航觅食的碎屑食草动物Metridia lucens和Oncaeidae在很大程度上与西岸有关,但表现出不同的生态位偏好。M.lucens居住在Agulhas西岸(WAB)富含叶绿素的外岸,很可能是本格拉南部上升流系统群落的延续,而oncaeid生物量与WAB和CAB西部更深的温跃层有关,这些温跃层通常以它们所捕食的凝胶状浮游动物的堆积为特征,主要是杂食性伏击进食者,与WAB和CAB的内陆架至中陆架区域有关,远离Agulhas洋流的主要影响。中心斑生物量与内部WAB上升高的叶绿素a(可能是Benguela群落(C.brachiatus)的延伸)以及内部CAB架上的冷脊很好地对齐,与早期与C.chierchie相关的模式相匹配。Oithonidae分布广泛,但生物量低,在受Agulhas洋流影响的外陆架上稀少,这表明与较冷的Benguela上升流区域相比,这一群体的总体环境并不理想。目前的觅食和杂食性胸膜属,已知为深垂直迁徙动物,集中在WAB大陆架边缘以外。在24年的时间序列中,整个Agulhas河岸的桡足类总生物量都出现了显著下降,agulhensis的所有阶段都出现了下降,包括大型无节幼体和小型类(Paracalanidae和Clausolanidae)。没有观察到其他桡足类分类群的长期趋势。我们没有发现温度的变化趋势,但在30米处,叶绿素a有显著但微弱的增加(1.5%yr−1)。尽管桡足类生物量没有因ca中上层鱼类的东移而发生明显变化,但1996年,1988年至2011年,桡足类(总桡足类和C.agulhensis)和中上层鱼类(总、凤尾鱼和红眼鱼)的生物量之间存在显著的负相关,1998年后的桡足类的生物量明显低于之前。这表明捕食压力对Agulhas河岸的桡足类生物量有着重要的自上而下的影响。然而,尽管现场和远程数据系列的结果不明确,但不能排除环境驱动因素自下而上的强迫作用,而且气候变化导致的长期变暖预计将对生态系统生产力产生大规模的负面影响。
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Patterns in the plankton – Spatial distribution and long-term variability of copepods on the Agulhas Bank

Copepods dominate the zooplankton community on the broad Agulhas Bank off southern Africa, where they provide an important food resource for pelagic fish and other biota. Previous studies have shown the dominant copepod Calanus agulhensis, which may comprise up to 80% of copepod biomass, to be strongly associated with the productive cold ridge of upwelled water on the central (CAB) and eastern (EAB) Agulhas Bank. However, there is little information available on other copepod taxa, and whether the Agulhas Bank community has changed over time in response to environmental variability or other ecosystem changes, such as the recent eastward shift in pelagic fish distribution. We use in situ temperature, chlorophyll a (chl a), and zooplankton data collected annually in late spring to explore spatio-temporal variability in copepod biomass and species composition on the Agulhas Bank over a 24-year period, from 1988 to 2011. Functional traits were used to interpret the observed patterns. Total copepod abundance and biomass were concentrated on the outer central and eastern shelf (>100 m), coincident with the region of elevated chl a at 30 m, and largely downstream from cooler subsurface water linked to the cold ridge and coastal upwelling. Current and cruise-feeding herbivores C. agulhensis and the smaller Para- and Clausocalanidae collectively accounted for 73% and 54% of total copepod biomass and abundance respectively, driving the main patterns for total biomass. C. agulhensis copepodites showed an ontogenetic shift in distribution with distance offshore and downstream from the cold ridge, and accumulation of older stages near the southern tip of the bank. The upwelling specialist Calanoides natalis was closely associated with shelf-edge upwelling, particularly near the Agulhas Bight, but was low in biomass compared to the Benguela upwelling system. The current/cruise-feeding detritivores Metridia lucens and the Oncaeidae were largely associated with the western sector of the bank but showed different niche preferences. M. lucens inhabited the chl-rich outer bank of the western Agulhas Bank (WAB), likely a continuation of the southern Benguela upwelling system community, while oncaeid biomass was associated with deeper thermoclines across the WAB and western part of the CAB that often feature accumulations of the gelatinous zooplankton they feed on. Centropages spp. and the Oithonidae, mainly omnivorous ambush feeders, were associated with the inner to mid-shelf region of the WAB and CAB, away from the main influence of the Agulhas Current. Centropages biomass aligned well with elevated chl a on the inner WAB, likely an extension of the Benguela community (C. brachiatus), and with the cold ridge over the inner CAB shelf, matching earlier patterns linked to C. chierchiae. Oithonidae were widespread but low in biomass, and scarce over the Agulhas Current-influenced outer shelf, suggesting a suboptimal environment overall for this group compared to the cooler Benguela upwelling region. Current-feeding and omnivorous Pleuromamma spp., known to be deep vertical migrators, were concentrated beyond the WAB shelf edge. Total copepod biomass showed a significant decline over the entire Agulhas Bank during the 24-year time series, as did all stages of C. agulhensis, including large nauplii, and the small calanoids (Paracalanidae and Clausocalanidae). No long-term trends were observed for the other copepod taxa. We found no trends in temperature, but a significant but weak (1.5% yr−1) increase in chl a at 30 m. Although there was no obvious shift in copepod biomass in response to the eastward shift in pelagic fish in ca. 1996, there were significant negative relationships between copepod biomass (for total copepods and C. agulhensis) and pelagic fish biomass (total, anchovy and redeye) from 1988 to 2011, with significantly lower copepod biomass after 1998 compared to before. This suggests predation pressure has an important top-down influence on copepod biomass on the Agulhas Bank. Bottom-up forcing from environmental drivers cannot be ruled out, however, despite ambiguous results from in situ and remote data series, and long-term warming due to climate change is expected to negatively impact ecosystem productivity at the large scale.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
16.70%
发文量
115
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Deep-Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography publishes topical issues from the many international and interdisciplinary projects which are undertaken in oceanography. Besides these special issues from projects, the journal publishes collections of papers presented at conferences. The special issues regularly have electronic annexes of non-text material (numerical data, images, images, video, etc.) which are published with the special issues in ScienceDirect. Deep-Sea Research Part II was split off as a separate journal devoted to topical issues in 1993. Its companion journal Deep-Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers, publishes the regular research papers in this area.
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