Self-organisation of zooplankton communities produces similar food chain lengths throughout the ocean

Author:

Everett Jason1ORCID,Heneghan Ryan2,Blanchard Julia3ORCID,Suthers Iain4ORCID,Pakhomov Evgeny5,Sykes Patrick6ORCID,Schoeman David7ORCID,Baird Mark8ORCID,Basedow Sünnje Linnéa9ORCID,Błachowiak-Samołyk Katarzyna10,Heath Michael11,Hopcroft Russell12,Huggett Jenny13ORCID,Huret Martin14,Kimmel David15ORCID,Labat Jean-Philippe16,Lopes Rubens17,Marcolin Catarina18,Nogueira Enrique19ORCID,Noyon Margaux20,Schultes Sabine21,Sourisseau Marc22,Swadling Kerrie3,Trudnowska Emilia23ORCID,Richardson Anthony1

Affiliation:

1. The University of Queensland

2. Queensland University of Technology

3. University of Tasmania

4. University of New South Wales

5. University of British Columbia

6. University of Queensland

7. University of the Sunshine Coast

8. CSIRO

9. UiT The Arctic University of Norway

10. Polish Academy of Sciences

11. University of Strathclyde

12. University of Alaska Fairbanks

13. Fisheries and the Environment

14. IFREMER

15. NOAA Fisheries, Alaska Fisheries Science Center

16. Laboratoire d'Océanographie de Villefranche

17. University of São Paulo

18. Federal University of Southern Bahia

19. Instituto Español de Oceanografía (IEO-CSIC)

20. Nelson Mandela University

21. LMU Munich

22. IFREMER, French Institute for Sea Research

23. Institute of Oceanology, Polish Academy of Sciences

Abstract

Abstract For over 50 years, the conceptualisation of low-nutrient oligotrophic systems having longer food chains and thus lower energy transfer to fish than their high-nutrient eutrophic counterparts1 has achieved the status of an ecological paradigm. However, recent global assessments indicate global fish biomass could be much higher than previously thought2–4, suggesting that our traditional understanding of food webs may need to be revisited. Here, we challenge the classical paradigm by exploring the role of zooplankton in food webs across the world’s oceans. Using observed zooplankton size spectra, and output from a size-spectrum model that resolves nine zooplankton groups, we conclude that food chains in oligotrophic (low-nutrient) and eutrophic (high-nutrient) systems have similar lengths. We offer a compelling hypothesis to explain this emergent pattern: self-organisation of zooplankton groups across the global productivity gradient regulates food chain length. We find that in oligotrophic systems the increased carnivory and longer food chains are offset by relatively large gelatinous filter feeders eating the dominant small phytoplankton, resulting in shorter-than-expected food chains, but decreasing food quality for fish. Our findings highlight the pivotal role zooplankton play in regulating energy transfer. Better resolution of zooplankton groups, their feeding relationships and carbon content in models will increase our ability to estimate current global fish biomass 5, project future fish biomass under climate change6–8, and provide more-robust forecasts of nutrient9 and carbon cycling10.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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