Record Details

Trophic efficiency of plankton food webs: Observations from the Gulf of Mannar and the Palk Bay, Southeast Coast of India

DRS at CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography

View Archive Info
 
 
Field Value
 
Title Trophic efficiency of plankton food webs: Observations from the Gulf of Mannar and the Palk Bay, Southeast Coast of India
 
Creator Anjusha, A.
Jyothibabu, R.
Jagadeesan, L.
Mohan, A.P.
Sudheesh, K.
Krishna, K.
Ullas, N.
Deepak, M.P.
 
Subject phytoplankton
zooplankton
seasonal variations
food webs
 
Description This paper introduces the structure and trophic efficiency of plankton food webs in the Gulf of Mannar (GoM) and the Palk Bay (PB) - two least studied marine environments located between India and Sri Lanka. The study is based on the results obtained from a field sampling exercise carried out in the GoM and the PB in March 2010 (Spring Intermonsoon - SIM), September 2010 (Southwest Monsoon - SWM) and January 2011 (Northeast Monsoon - NEM). Based on multivariate analysis of major environmental parameters during different seasons, it was possible to clearly segregate the GoM and the PB into separate clusters, except during the SWM. This segregation of the GoM and the PB was closely linked with the seasonally reversing ocean currents in the region, as evident from the MIKE 21 flow model results. During the period of relatively low phytoplankton biomass (less than 23 mg C m sup(-3)), the organic carbon contribution of the microbial loop was significantly high ? both in the GoM and the PB. During the SIM, the carbon biomass available in the plankton food web was significantly higher in the PB (av. 122.8 plus or minus 47.60 mg C m sup(-3)) than in the GoM (av. 81.89 plus or minus 35.50 mg C m sup(-3)). This was due to a strong microbial loop in the former region. In the GoM, phytoplankton contributed a considerable portion (more than 50 percent) of the carbon biomass during the SWM and the NEM, whereas, microbial loop contributed significantly (80 percent) during the SIM. The microbial loop was predominant in the PB throughout the study period, being as high as 83 percent of the total plankton biomass during the SIM. As compared to the PB, the mesozooplankton biomass was higher in the GoM during the SWM and the NEM and lower during the SIM. The relatively high mesozooplankton stock in the PB during the SIM was closely linked with a strong microbial loop, which contributed the major share (av. 101.6 plus or minus 24.3 mg C m sup(-3)) of the total organic carbon available in the food web (av. 126.6 plus or minus 24.3 mg C m sup(-3)). However, when microbial loop contributed more than 65 percent of the total organic carbon available in the food web, the trophic efficiency was found to be low (approx. 3 percent), which can be attributed to the wide dispersal of organic carbon in the microbial loop. Importantly, during the NEM, when the copepod Paracalanus parvus was predominant in the PB, the trophic efficiency of the microbial loop dominant food web increased by more than a fold (7.2 percent). The study provides evidences for the first time from the field that exceptionally high abundance of efficient microzooplankton-consuming zooplankton can significantly increase the trophic efficiency of the microbial loop dominant plankton food web.
 
Date 2013-04-01T11:04:05Z
2013-04-01T11:04:05Z
2013
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Journal of Marine Systems, vol.115-116; 2013; 40-61
no
http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/4276
 
Language en
 
Relation J_Mar_Syst_115-116_40.jpg
 
Rights An edited version of this paper was published by Elsevier. Copyright [2013] Elsevier
 
Publisher Elsevier