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| Copepod Calanus hyperboreus.
Photo by R. Hopcroft/NOAA. |
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| Pteropod (sea butterfly) Limacina helicina. Photo by R.
Hopcroft/NOAA. |
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| Pteropod (sea butterfly) Clione limacine. Photo by Kristina Brown. |
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| Amphipods. Photo by R. Hopcroft/NOAA. |
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| Cnidarian (jelly fish), Algantha. Photo by R. Hopcroft/NOAA. |
| | Photos 1, 2, 4, and 5 provided courtesy of the UAF Census of Marine Life/Arctic Ocean Biodiversity website. |
Cruise - 2006 Dispatches
Calendar
Dispatch 35, September 8, 2006
By Helen Drost, IOS
Little Creatures
"Strange and beautiful things were brought to us from time to time, which
seemed to give us a glimpse of the edge of some unfamiliar world" - C.
Wyville Thomson, The Challenger Expedition (1876).
Jenny Hutchings mentioned, in Dispatch 10 – Bongos, that we were planning to
drop nets at many different stations. And so we have! To date we’ve
collected zooplankton at 10 stations with the last one planned for tomorrow.
At each station we deployed 3 different mesh size nylon conical nets. These
include a large (236 µm), a medium (150 µm) and 2 very fine (53 µm) nets.
All are attached to circular rings that are nicknamed Bongos. Flow meters
are secured in the center of these rings to enable quantitative estimates of
the water volume filtered and total species abundance.
Plankton is a Greek word for wanderer. It is a general term used to
describe small organisms suspended in the water. Plankton was traditionally
used to describe organisms that cannot swim against most currents. However,
many zooplankton, which includes both unicellular and multicellular animals,
are actually quite good swimmers and can migrate, on a daily basis, great
distances up and down the water column. For instance, copepods (small
crustaceans that are a primary food source for many marine animals) can
migrate hundreds of meters twice a day at speeds that have been measured
from 10 to an astonishing 168 meters per hour (550 ft per hour).
We sample at different depths, with nets of different mesh size and at
different times of day and night. There is always a diverse assemblage to
be found including the ubiquitous copepods, chaetognaths (arrow worms),
cnidarians (jelly fish), ctenophores (comb jellies) and amphipods. There
are even sea butterflies! They belong to the Mollusca phylum and are
commonly known as pteropods (snails that swim). The two species we have
seen are Limacina helicina and Clione limacina. The familiar foot of land
snails has morphed into wings that flap up and down and enable them to swim
through the water. It is wonderful to watch them swim but the story does
not end there.
These two species are thought to be present only in high latitude waters.
This phenomenon is termed bipolar distribution. They are not found anywhere
in between. This is possibly due to deep water current transport that links
the poles. However, a second theory is that they once were distributed
evenly in all areas but competitive interactions with other zooplankton
ultimately limited their zones of habitation.
One last note about these wondrous pteropods is that Clione limacina feed
exclusively on its close relative Limacina helicina. Such specialization
makes Clione limacina vulnerable to any change in abundance of Limacina
helicina populations.
Even though a century has passed since the famous Challenger Expedition, we
are still finding new species of zooplankton, especially in the Arctic.
Many questions remain unanswered. A comprehensive study of arctic
zooplankton is urgently required if, as many scientists warn, climate change
threatens to radically alter Polar Regions.
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