Body length, dry and ash-free dry weights, and developmental changes at each copepodid stage in five sympatric mesopelagic aetideid copepods in the western Arctic Ocean

Author:

Koguchi Yunosuke1ORCID,Tokuhiro Koki12,Ashjian Carin J.3,Campbell Robert G.4,Yamaguchi Atsushi15

Affiliation:

1. Faculty / Graduate School of Fisheries Sciences, Hokkaido University, 3-1-1 Minato-cho, Hako-date, Hokkaido 041-8611, Japan

2. Present address: Environmental Management Research Institute, National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, 16-1 Onogawa, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-0053, Japan

3. Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 266 Woods Hole Road., Woods Hole, MA 02543, U.S.A.

4. Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, RI 02882, U.S.A.

5. Arctic Research Center, Hokkaido University, Kita-21 Nishi-11 Kita-ku, Sapporo, Hokkaido 001-0021, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Aetideid copepods dominate the mesopelagic layer of the Arctic Ocean and play an important role in the vertical material flux and biodiversity. However, little information about the lengths and weights of their copepodids is available. In this study, we collected five sympatric aetideid copepods, Chiridius obtusifrons Sars G.O., 1902, Gaetanus tenuispinus (Sars G.O., 1900), Gaetanus brevispinus (Sars G.O., 1900), Aetideopsis multiserrata (Wolfenden, 1904), and Aetideopsis rostrata Sars G.O., 1903, from the Arctic Ocean and examined their body lengths, dry and ash-free dry weights, and developmental growths at each copepodid stage. Highly significant length-weight relationships were obtained among copepodids for all species. Within genera, individuals of the same length were heavier at shallower depths. This may result from the greater nutritional availability to species within genera inhabiting shallower depths. Common to all species, the organic content (ash-free dry weight per dry weight) was high for the early copepodid stages. This may be due to the residual organic content of lipid-rich eggs retained in the non-feeding nauplii. The largest growth in females occurred at C5/C6, whereas the largest growth in males occurred at C4/C5, as determined by moult increment and proportion of growth in weight. These sex differences in weight growth could be due to the degeneration of the feeding appendage and cessation of feeding in C6 males of aetideid copepods.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Animal Science and Zoology,Aquatic Science

Reference30 articles.

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2. The ecology of Arctic deep-sea copepods (Euchaetidae and Aetideidae). Aspects of their distribution, trophodynamics and effect on the carbon flux;Auel, H.

3. Mesozooplankton community structure, abundance and biomass in the central Arctic Ocean;Auel, H.

4. Calculating solar radiation for ecological studies;Brock, T. D.

5. Feeding by the euphausiid Euphausia pacifica and the copepod Calanus pacificus on marine snow;Dilling, L.

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