Published January 24, 2014 | Version v1
Journal article Open

A model for the description of feeding regulation by mesozooplankton under different conditions of temperature and prey nutritional status

  • 1. Department of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, Ghana
  • 2. Institute of Hydrobiology and Fisheries Science, KlimaCampus, University of Hamburg, Grosse Elbstrasse 133, 22767 Hamburg, Germany
  • 3. Technical University of Denmark, Division for Aquatic Resources (DTU-Aqua), Jaegerborg Alle 1, 2920 Charlottenlund, Denmark

Description

Ecosystem modelling studies that consider mesozooplankton feeding regulation have primarily focused on the impact of prey nutritional status and temperature separately, despite experimental evidence for strong links between these two factors. Here, we propose a method based on optimal feeding behaviour of individual mesozooplankton that can be used to derive acclimative food ingestion, assimilation, and respiration under different temperature and food conditions. In the model, animals first evaluate the nutritional value of prey organisms based on their temperature-specific demand for energy and structural biochemical substances. They then regulate their feeding behaviour as well as metabolic physiology in order to satisfy their specific biochemical requirements for maintenance and growth. The approach is applicable to all heterotrophic plankton. In the example presented here the model has been configured to simulate egg production by the calanoid copepod Acartia tonsa. The model realistically reproduces the observed rates for egg production, as well as carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) gross growth efficiencies of egg production by Acartia in response to changes in both algal C:N-ratio and temperature. Results suggest that enhanced temperature accelerates respiratory consumption of the N assimilated by mesozooplankton, and thus decreases the rates for reproduction at higher temperatures. They also show that the optimum temperature for maximum egg production increases with algal C:N-ratio. These findings support and extend conclusions previously obtained for mesozooplankton and indicate that ocean warming could alter the role of Acartia spp. in planktonic food webs.

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Additional details

Related works

Is supplement to
10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2013.09.009 (DOI)

Funding

EURO-BASIN – European Union Basin-scale Analysis, Synthesis and Integration (EURO-BASIN) 264933
European Commission