Impact of aggregate‐colonizing copepods on the biological carbon pump in a high‐latitude fjord

Author:

Svensen Camilla1ORCID,Iversen Morten23ORCID,Norrbin Fredrika1ORCID,Möller Klas Ove4ORCID,Wiedmann Ingrid1ORCID,Skarðhamar Jofrid5ORCID,Barth‐Jensen Coralie1ORCID,Kwasniewski Slawomir6ORCID,Ormanczyk Mateusz6ORCID,Dąbrowska Anna Maria5ORCID,Koski Marja7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Arctic and Marine Biology UiT the Arctic University of Norway Tromsø Norway

2. Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research Bremen Germany

3. MARUM and University of Bremen Bremen Germany

4. Institute of Carbon Cycles, Helmholtz‐Zentrum Hereon Geesthacht Germany

5. Institute of Marine Research Tromsø Norway

6. Department of Marine Ecology Institute of Oceanology Polish Academy of Sciences Sopot Poland

7. Technical University of Denmark Lyngby Denmark

Abstract

AbstractZooplankton consumption of sinking aggregates affects the quality and quantity of organic carbon exported to the deep ocean. Increasing laboratory evidence shows that small particle‐associated copepods impact the flux attenuation by feeding on sinking particles, but this has not been quantified in situ. We investigated the impact of an abundant particle‐colonizing copepod, Microsetella norvegica, on the attenuation of the vertical carbon flux in a sub‐Arctic fjord. This study combines field measurements of vertical carbon flux, abundance, and size‐distribution of marine snow and degradation rates of fecal pellets and algal aggregates. Female M. norvegica altered their feeding behavior when exposed to aggregates, and ingestion rates were 0.20 μg C ind.−1 d−1 on marine snow and 0.11 μg C ind.−1 d−1 on intact krill fecal pellets, corresponding to 48% and 26% of the females' body carbon mass. Due to high sea surface abundance of up to ~ 50 ind. L−1, the population of M. norvegica had the potential to account for almost all the carbon removal in the upper 50 m of the water column, depending on the type of the aggregate. Our observations highlight the potential importance of abundant small‐sized copepods for biogeochemical cycles through their impact on export flux and its attenuation in the twilight zone.

Publisher

Wiley

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