Influence of food type on the production and settling rate of faecal pellets produced by an estuarine copepod
S. L. Griffin
Marine and Freshwater Research 51(4) 371 - 378
Abstract
Production of faecal pellets by the
herbivorous estuarine copepodGladioferens imparipes, and
the rate at which the pellets sink through a water column, were investigated
in the laboratory. Pellet production rate, at excess food concentration,
varied among food types, with a maximum rate of 3.2 pellets h
–1 copepod –1 when
copepods were fed on the diatom Skeletonema costatum,
and a minimum of 1.5 when fed on the chlorophyte
Chlamydomonas globosa. Pellet production rates may have
reflected feeding prehistory and related effects on food preference and
ingestion rates. Settling rates ranged from 2.0 m day
–1 for pellets produced on the thecate
dinoflagellate Scrippsiella sp. to 71.8 for pellets
produced on S. costatum. The estimate of settling rate
was strongly influenced by the method used to measure it and measure pellet
density. Application of the laboratory results to average copepod densities in
the Swan River estuary suggested a conservative estimate of production of 360
pellets L –1 day –1 ,
or 8 ˜g C and 1 ˜g N, given appropriate food conditions. With a
conservative estimate of settling rate at 6.3 m day
–1 , pellets would easily reach the sediments
within a tidal cycle in many parts of the Swan River estuary.
Keywords: estuary, production rate, feeding
history.
Full text doi:10.1071/MF99047
© CSIRO 2000





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