4.2 Article

Swimming performance of subarctic Calanus spp. facing downward currents

Journal

MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES
Volume 665, Issue -, Pages 47-61

Publisher

INTER-RESEARCH
DOI: 10.3354/meps13674

Keywords

Calanoid copepods; Swimming behaviour; Depth retention; Downwelling currents

Funding

  1. Sea Patches project of the Norwegian Research Council [268391/E40]
  2. Fisheries and Oceans Canada [F5284-180227]
  3. UiT The Arctic University of Norway [F5284-180227]
  4. NASA [80NSSC20K0074]

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The study assessed the swimming performance of subarctic Calanus spp. in downward currents and found that the copepods could adapt to light to moderate downward flows, significantly reducing sinking rates even at higher flow speeds.
Calanoid copepods dominate mesozooplankton communities in temperate and Nordic seas. The ability of copepods to remain and feed in productive surface waters depends on their ability to overcome downward flows. In this study, we assessed the swimming performance of subarctic Calanus spp. and tested how the copepods can retain their vertical position in a representative range of downward currents (between 0 and 5.4 cm s(-1)) simulated in a downwelling flume. Mean vertical and horizontal copepod swimming velocities and accelerations, movement periodicity and trajectory complexity were obtained by tracking individual trajectories in the field of view of 2 cameras. Copepod swimming velocity increased with increasing downward flow and matched downward flows up to 2 cm s(-1). Beyond 2 cm s(-1), animals were still able to significantly reduce their sinking rates, but their motions changed. Trajectories became simpler, swimming velocities changed on shorter time scales and instantaneous acceleration increased. These results are consistent with predictions of balancing depth retention against encounter rates with food and predators. Frequency distributions of vertical swimming speeds were mostly unimodal, with entire experimental populations responding in the same way. Coordination of movements and the ability to resist moderate downwelling flows can result in the accumulation of copepods in large surface swarms as observed in the field.

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