Impact of aggregate-colonizing copepods on the biological carbon pump in a high-latitude fjord
Svensen, Camilla; Iversen, Morten; Norrbin, Maria Fredrika; Möller, Klas Ove; Wiedmann, Ingrid; Skardhamar, Jofrid; Barth-Jensen, Coralie Marie Christine; Kwasniewski, Slawomir; Ormanczyk, Mateusz; Dąbrowska, Anna Maria; Koski, Marja
Peer reviewed, Journal article
Published version
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3152690Utgivelsesdato
2024Metadata
Vis full innførselSamlinger
- Articles [3343]
- Publikasjoner fra CRIStin [3536]
Sammendrag
Zooplankton consumption of sinking aggregates affects the quality and quantity of organic carbon exported to the deep ocean. Increasing laboratory evidence shows that small particle-associated copepods impact the flux attenuation by feeding on sinking particles, but this has not been quantified in situ. We investigated the impact of an abundant particle-colonizing copepod, Microsetella norvegica, on the attenuation of the vertical carbon flux in a sub-Arctic fjord. This study combines field measurements of vertical carbon flux, abundance, and size-distribution of marine snow and degradation rates of fecal pellets and algal aggregates. Female M. norvegica altered their feeding behavior when exposed to aggregates, and ingestion rates were 0.20 μg C ind.−1 d−1 on marine snow and 0.11 μg C ind.−1 d−1 on intact krill fecal pellets, corresponding to 48% and 26% of the females' body carbon mass. Due to high sea surface abundance of up to ~ 50 ind. L−1, the population of M. norvegica had the potential to account for almost all the carbon removal in the upper 50 m of the water column, depending on the type of the aggregate. Our observations highlight the potential importance of abundant small-sized copepods for biogeochemical cycles through their impact on export flux and its attenuation in the twilight zone.
