Microzooplankton grazing before, during and after a cyanobacterial bloom in Vancouver Lake, Washington, USA
[摘要] ABSTRACT: We conducted 16 dilution experiments from April 2008 to January 2009 to estimate microzooplankton grazing and intrinsic phytoplankton growth rates before, during and after a bloom of filamentous cyanobacteria in Vancouver Lake, Washington, USA. Intrinsic phytoplankton growth rates were low in April (~0.4 d−1), increased to a maximum (1.2 d−1) in May, and then declined to zero and became negative in June and early July, prior to a phytoplankton bloom dominated by cyanobacteria (Aphanizomenon flos-aquae). Phytoplankton growth rates rose as the bloom progressed, reaching rates >1.0 d−1 in August and September, then declined through autumn. Spring microzooplankton grazing rates were low (−0.3 to 0.3 d−1), then became substantially negative (−1.1 to −1.5 d−1) preceding the chlorophyll a bloom. During the bloom, grazing rates quickly increased to a maximum of 0.8 d−1 and remained high as the bloom declined. Microzooplankton grazing specifically on cyanobacteria was high in spring (1.0 d−1), negative just before the bloom (−0.7 d−1 to −1.0 d−1), and low in autumn (0.3 to 0.7 d−1). Negative grazing on cyanobacteria immediately before the bloom may have been due to preferential grazing on other co-occurring prey, thus enabling the bloom to form, while higher grazing rates on cyanobacteria, especially on Aphanizomenon flos-aquae, in autumn is likely to have contributed to the bloom’s decline. These findings show that microzooplankton can potentially influence cyanobacterial blooms directly and indirectly through grazing.
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[效力级别] [学科分类] 生物科学(综合)
[关键词] Microzooplankton;Grazing;Aphanizomenon flos-aquae;Harmful algal bloom;Eutrophication;Cyanobacteria [时效性]