4.4 Article

The relative importance of sloppy feeding, excretion, and fecal pellet leaching in the release of dissolved carbon and nitrogen by Acartia tonsa copepods

Journal

JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY
Volume 404, Issue 1-2, Pages 47-56

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jembe.2011.04.013

Keywords

Carbon; Excretion; Fecal pellet leaching; Nitrogen; Sloppy feeding; Zooplankton

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [OCE-0221825]
  2. United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

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Crustacean zooplankton produce dissolved organic matter (DOM) and inorganic nutrients via sloppy feeding, excretion, and fecal pellet leaching. These different mechanisms of the release of metabolic products, however, have never been individually isolated. Our study was designed to determine the relative importance of these different modes on release of dissolved organic carbon (DOC), ammonium (NH(4)(+)), and urea from Acartia tonsa calanoid copepods feeding on the diatom Thalassiosira weissflogii. Excretion and sloppy feeding were the dominant modes of DOC production (80 and 20% of total DOC release, respectively) and NH(4)(+) release (93 and 7% of total NH(4)(+) release, respectively). Urea, however, was predominately produced via sloppy feeding and fecal pellet leaching (25% and 62% of total urea release, respectively). Urea contributed 20% of total measured nitrogen (TMN; NH(4)(+) + urea) released from copepods, and constituted 100% of TMN released via fecal pellet leaching, 47% of TMN released via sloppy feeding, and only 3.5% of TMN released via excretion. TMN release was >100% of copepod body N d(-1), resulting in low DOC:TMN release ratios (4.1 for sloppy feeding, 2.1 for cumulative release of sloppy feeding, excretion, and fecal pellet leaching). Our results suggest that the mechanism of release plays an important role in the amount of different forms of DOM, NH(4)(+), and urea available to bacteria and phytoplankton. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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