Journal of Marine Science and Engineering (Sep 2022)
On the Predation of Doliolids (Tunicata, Thaliacea) on calanoid Copepods
Abstract
The main goal of this contribution was to determine the effect of predation of the often abundant to dominant doliolid Dolioletta gegenbauri (Tunicata, Thaliacea) on the abundance of co-occurring planktonic copepods by feeding on their eggs. Previous oceanographic investigations revealed that doliolids had ingested eggs of small calanoid copepods. The ecological significance of such feeding could not be quantified completely because the environmental abundance of such eggs was not known. In this study, the eggs and nauplii of the neritic calanoid Paracalanus quasimodo (Crustacea, Copepoda) were offered to gonozooids and phorozooids of D. gegenbauri with a 6–6.5 mm length together with three species of phytoplankton; i.e., simulating diet conditions on the shelf. We hypothesized that copepod eggs of a similar size as food particles would be readily ingested whereas small nauplii, which could escape, would hardly be eaten by the doliolids. Our results revealed that doliolids have the potential to control small calanoids by ingesting their eggs at high rates but not their nauplii or later stages. Late copepodid stages and adults of co-occurring calanoid species could cause less mortality because they prey less on such eggs than doliolids of a similar weight. However, certain abundant omnivorous calanoid species with pronounced perception and/or capture abilities can prey successfully on the nauplii of small calanoids.
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