Tracking seasonal changes in North Sea zooplankton trophic dynamics using stable isotopes
Publication date
2013
Authors
Kürten, B.
Painting, S.J.
Struck, U.
Polunin, N.V.C.
Middelburg, J.J.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2013
Abstract
Trophodynamics of meso-zooplankton in
the North Sea (NS) were assessed at a site in the
southern NS, and at a shallow and a deep site in the
central NS. Offshore and neritic species from different
ecological niches, including Calanus spp., Temora
spp. and Sagitta spp., were collected during seven
cruises over 14 months from 2007 to 2008. Bulk stable
isotope (SI) analysis, phospholipid-derived fatty acid
(PLFA) compositions, and d13CPLFA data of mesozooplankton
and particulate organic matter (POM)
were used to describe changes in zooplankton relative
trophic positions (RTPs) and trophodynamics. The
aim of the study was to test the hypothesis that the
RTPs of zooplankton in the North Sea vary spatially
and seasonally, in response to hydrographic variability,
with the microbial food web playing an important
role at times. Zooplankton RTPs tended to be higher
during winter and lower during the phytoplankton
bloom in spring. RTPs were highest for predators such
as Sagitta sp. and Calanus helgolandicus and lowest
for small copepods such as Pseudocalanus elongatus
and zoea larvae (Brachyura). d15NPOM-based RTPs
were only moderate surrogates for animals’ ecological
niches, because of the plasticity in source materials
from the herbivorous and the microbial loop food web.
Common (16:0) and essential (eicosapentaenoic acid,
EPA and docosahexaenoic acid, DHA) structural
lipids showed relatively constant abundances. This
could be explained by incorporation of PLFAs with
d13C signatures which followed seasonal changes in bulk d13CPOM and PLFA d13CPOM signatures. This study highlighted the complementarity of three biogeochemical
approaches for trophodynamic studies
and substantiated conceptual views of size-based food
web analysis, in which small individuals of large
species may be functionally equivalent to large
individuals of small species. Seasonal and spatial
variability was also important in altering the relative
importance of the herbivorous and microbial food
webs.
Keywords
Calanus, Compound-specific stable isotope analysis, GC-c-IRMS, North Sea, Phospholipids, Size-based food web, Stable isotopes, Zooplankton