Title: 7 The Water Column Plankton
17 The Water ColumnPlankton
- Notes for Marine Biology Function, Biodiversity,
Ecology - by Jeffrey S. Levinton
2Plankton Definitions
- Plankton organisms living in the water column,
too small to be able to swim counter to typical
ocean currents
3Plankton Definitions
- Phytoplankton
- Zooplankton
- Mixoplankton (or mixotrophic)
4Plankton Definitions
- Holoplankton - permanent residents
- Meroplankton - temporary residents
- Neuston - associated with slick
- Pleuston - sticking up above water surface
5Plankton Definitions
6Vertical Position of Plankton - Factors
- Bulk density - regulated by ionic substitution,
gas secretion, and release (cuttlefish, Nautilus) - Swimming behavior
- Turbulence stirs plankton through the water column
7Vertical Position of Plankton - Factors
- Size of plankton - smaller plankton, low Reynolds
number - Low Re means there is a boundary layer around
plankters body - Smaller organisms denser than seawater sink with
a constant velocity, proportional to organismal
volume, although increases of spines etc. can
slow sinking
8Phytoplankton
Diatoms
- Occur singly or form chains
- Size range of nanno to microplankton
- Encased in silica shell consisting of two valves
- Usually radially symmetrical
- Reproduce asexually by binary fission
- Also sexual reproduction
- Doubling once or twice per day usually
9(a) Diatoms
10Thalassiosira
Chaetoceros
Asterionella japonica
11Phytoplankton
Dinoflagellates
- Secrete organic test and have two flagellae
- Size range of nanno and microplankton
- Asexual and sexual reproduction
- Often some life history stages, benthic cysts
- Many species are heterotrophic
- Often abundant in tropics, mid-latitudes in
summer - A few species are the cause of red tides
12Peridinium
(b) Dinoflagellate
13Phytoplankton
Other Groups
- Cyanobacteria - abundant, nitrogen fixation
- Coccolithophores - unicellular, nannoplankton,
spherical, and covered with calcium carbonate
plates - coccoliths - Silicoflagellates - unicellular, biflagellate,
internal skeleton of silica scales, often in
Antarctic, open ocean
14Cyanobacteria types
15Bloom of coccolithophores, near Newfoundland
Coccolithophore
16Silicoflagellate
17Phytoplankton
Other Groups
- Numerous other groups, including many flagellated
types - CRUCIAL POINTS ABOUT PHYTOPLANKTON
- DIVERSITY IN WATER COLUMN
- DIFFERENT NUTRIENT NEEDS OF VARIOUS GROUPS (e.g.,
Fe, Si, Ca, P, N) - DIFFERENT PROPERTIES SUCH AS BULK DENSITY,
ABILITY TO SWIM
18Zooplankton
Crustacean zooplankton (Arthropods)
- External chitin skeleton
- Segmentation
- Paired jointed appendages (e.g., legs, antennae)
- Antennae, mandibles, and maxillae as head
appendages - Usually compound eyes
- Include copepods, krill, amphipods (crabs,
lobsters, sowbugs - not in plankton)
19Zooplankton
Crustaceans - Copepods
- Largest group of crustaceans in zooplankton
- Range from lt1 - a few mm long
- Planktonic forms - Calanoida
- Long pair of antennae
- Swim mainly with aid of 5 pairs of thoracic
appendages - Lack compound eyes, medial naupliar eye
- Feed on phytoplankton or smaller zooplankton,
depending on the species
20Zooplankton
Copepod Feeding
Low Reynolds number - viscosity dominates Feeding
current (green) generated by thoracic
appendages Maxilliped reaches out and grabs
particles entrained in current
21Zooplankton
Copepods
Females of different species with eggs
22Zooplankton
Crustaceans - Euphausids (Krill)
- Shrimplike, up to 5 cm long
- Abundant in Antarctic and in upwelling regions
- Main food of baleen whales in Antarctic
- Feed on phytoplankton and smaller zooplankton
- Feeding by means of group of appendages that form
a basket - appendages have setae and smaller
setules, hairs that capture particles
23Zooplankton
Gelatinous Zooplankton
- Jellies include a wide variety of distantly
related groups, all have gelatinous material used
for support (skeleton)
24Zooplankton
Gelatinous Zooplankton - Cnidaria
- Planktonic Cnidaria Scyphozoan jellyfish,
Hydrozoan jellyfish (some meroplanktonic
jellyfish stages), and siphonophores, specialized
colonial and polymorphic cnidarians such as
Portuguese man-of-war - mainly carnivores, nematocysts - stinging cells -
on tentacles
25Zooplankton
Cnidaria - Scyphozoan jellyfish
Note muscular bell and tentacles
26Zooplankton
Gelatinous Zooplankton - Cnidaria
By-the-wind-sailor Velella
- Porpita (ca. 10 cm wide) Physophora
-
(50 mm high)
Siphonophores
27Physalia physalis
28Zooplankton
Gelatinous Zooplankton - Ctenophores
- Known as comb jellies
- Microcarnivores - feed on smaller zooplankton,
planktonic eggs, invertebrate larvae - 8 rows of meridional plates, some have two long
tentacles
29Zooplankton
Gelatinous Zooplankton - Ctenophores
30Zooplankton
Gelatinous Zooplankton - Salps
- Related to benthic sea squirts, but have
incurrent and exit siphons on opposite ends of
body - Solitary or colonial (up to 2 m in length)
- Have a tail, typical of tunicate swimming larvae
- Small, only a few mm long
- Tail generates current through house, current is
strained by fine fibers that trap food
Gelatinous Zooplankton - Larvacea
31Salps
Instructor recommend use of http//www.whoi.edu/c
ms/images/oceanus/salp_550_59911.jpg
32Zooplankton
Arrow worms
- Torpedo shaped, a few cm in length
- Rapid swimmers, carnivorous
33Zooplankton
Pteropods
- Holoplanktonic snails
- Swim by means of lateral projections from foot
- Suspension feed or are carnivorous, depending
upon species
34Zooplankton
Planktonic polychaetes
- Have very well developed parapodia
Instructor Use, for example http//www.tmbl.gu.se
/staff/FredrikPleijel/03Tomopteris_helgolandica.jp
g
35Zooplankton
Protistan zooplankton - Foraminifera
- Secrete skeleton of calcium carbonate, sometimes
with great ornamentation - Common in plankton
- Size 1 mm to a few mm
- Contractile pseudopodia trap food particles
- Foram ooze - deep-sea sediment
36Zooplankton
Protistan zooplankton - Radiolaria
- Skeleton of silica, sometimes with great
ornamentation, occurs singly and as colonies,
depending on species - Common in plankton
- Size 50 ?m to a few mm
- A membrane separates interior cell from exterior
cytoplasm, which streams out something like
foraminifera - Radiolarian ooze - deeper than foram ooze
37Zooplankton
Protistan zooplankton - Ciliates
- Common in plankton, feed on bacteria, smaller
phytoplankton, some mixotrophic - Elongate, ranging from size from about 50 ?m to
over 1 mm in length, covered with rows of cilia
Strombidium, 80??m long
Strombidium sp. Under UV light, ingested
chloroplasts in red
Photos by Diane Stoecker
38Phytoplankton and Microbial Diversity - Molecular
Techniques
- Problem of high diversity, enumeration in samples
- Important issue is function of cells e.g.,
photosynthesis, nitrogen transformation - Many plankton photosynthesizers and bacteria are
morphologically difficult to identify - Need other techniques to use probes to count
different cell types
39Phytoplankton and Microbial Diversity - Molecular
Techniques
- First need to collect sample and sort by cell size
40Phytoplankton and Microbial Diversity - Molecular
Techniques
- Immunofluorescence develop antibodies to
specific species, produce antibodies, tag
antibodies with fluorescent dye, enumerate dyed
cells by fluorescent reaction to uv light source - Monoclonal antibodies allows more specific
antigen-antibody reaction to specific proteins in
cell
41Phytoplankton and Microbial Diversity - Molecular
Techniques
Example immunofluorescence staining targetted at
cell surface proteins of red tide dinoflagellate
Alexandrium tamarense (yellow)
42Phytoplankton and Microbial Diversity - Molecular
Techniques
- DNA analysis using Polymerase Chain Reaction
(PCR) - Primers (short chain nucleotides) from known DNA
of a species can be used to bind to DNA of a cell
and then can be amplified and identified, even
quantified relative to other sequences
(quantitative version of PCR)
43Phytoplankton and Microbial Diversity - Molecular
Techniques
PCR involves steps of breaking up DNA into chains
(denaturation), adding primers (annealing) and
nucleotides, and new DNA sequence is synthesized
(extension) through steps of heating and cooling
44Phytoplankton and Microbial Diversity - Molecular
Techniques
- High Throughput Sequencing - It is possible now
to sequence entire genomes extreme example is
shotgun sequencing, involving complete sequencing
of an entire water sample of cells (See Hot
Topics 7.1)
45Phytoplankton and Microbial Diversity - Molecular
Techniques
- Microarrays DNA sequences are extracted from an
organism, and a library of sequences is recorded
sequences are synthesized and put on a chip
sample is added to chip and complementary
sequences in sample binds to appropriate spots on
chip. - Allows for enumeration of known sequences in a
water sample
46Phytoplankton and Microbial Diversity - Molecular
Techniques
- PCR study of nitrogen-transforming microbes.
Allows relative abundance of different types
(e.g., nitrogen-fixers denitrifiers) - see Ward,
B. and OMullan 2002, references in text) - PCR study of microbes as function of depth
allows complete survey of known microbes in
plankton as function of depth. Allows us to see
when photosynthesizers stop with a given depth
(e.g. survey of Pacific microbes with depth - see
DeLong et al. 2006, references in text)
47The End