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Small copepods could channel missing carbon through metazoan predation.
Roura, Álvaro; Strugnell, Jan M; Guerra, Ángel; González, Ángel F; Richardson, Anthony J.
Afiliación
  • Roura Á; Departamento de Ecología y Recursos Marinos Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas (IIM, CSIC) Vigo Spain.
  • Strugnell JM; Centre for Sustainable Tropical Fisheries and Aquaculture James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia.
  • Guerra Á; Departamento de Ecología y Recursos Marinos Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas (IIM, CSIC) Vigo Spain.
  • González ÁF; Departamento de Ecología y Recursos Marinos Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas (IIM, CSIC) Vigo Spain.
  • Richardson AJ; Centre for Applications in Natural Resource Mathematics, School of Mathematics and Physics University of Queensland St Lucia Queensland Australia.
Ecol Evol ; 8(22): 10868-10878, 2018 Nov.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30519413
ABSTRACT
Global ecosystem models are essential tools for predicting climate change impacts on marine systems. Modeled biogenic carbon fluxes in the ocean often match measured data poorly and part of this could be because small copepods (<2 mm) are modeled as unicellular feeders grazing on phytoplankton and microzooplankton. The most abundant copepods from a seasonal upwelling region of the Eastern North Atlantic were sorted, and a molecular method was applied to copepod gut contents to evaluate the extent of metazoan predation under two oceanographic conditions, a trophic pathway not accounted for in global models. Scaling up the results obtained herein, based on published field and laboratory estimates, suggests that small copepods could ingest 1.79-27.20 gigatons C/year globally. This ignored metazoan-copepod link could increase current estimates of biogeochemical fluxes (remineralization, respiration, and the biological pump) and export to higher trophic levels by 15.6%-24.4%. It could also account for global discrepancies between measured daily ingestion and copepod metabolic demand/growth. The inclusion of metazoan predation into global models could provide a more realistic role of the copepods in the ocean and if these preliminary data hold true at larger sample sizes and scales, the implications would be substantial at the global scale.
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Texto completo: 1 Bases de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Idioma: En Revista: Ecol Evol Año: 2018 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Bases de datos: MEDLINE Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies Idioma: En Revista: Ecol Evol Año: 2018 Tipo del documento: Article