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Copepod egg production in Long Island Sound, USA, as a function of the chemical composition of seston

141

Citations

21

References

1995

Year

Abstract

The effect of the chemical composition of seston on the egg-production rates (E,: eggs female-' d-') of the copepods Acartia hudsonica Pinhey and Ternora longicornis (Muller) was studied in Long Island Sound, USA, (41" 00' N, 73' 05' W) during spring 1990. The seston was analyzed for carbon, nitrogen, protein, carbohydrate (CHO) and fatty acid content as well as chlorophyll (chl) and ciliate concentrations. Pnncipal component analysis (PCA) revealed significant correlations [score >0.7 on a same principal component (PC)] between in situ E, of the 2 copepod species and the chemical composition of the seston. Protein, C H 0 and specific fatty acids correlated strongly with E, of A. hudsonica ( C H 0 negatively). The same components were moderately correlated (score >0.6 on a same PC) with the E, of T. longicornis. The fatty acid requirements of A. hudsonica and 7. longicornis were for high o3: w6 ratios and low 20:s to 22:6 ratios. The fatty acid 22:603 was also correlated with E, of both species. The concentration of ciliates and the C:N ratio of seston did not affect E, of any of the species under any condition. Path analysis models were composed to evaluate the important mechanisms controlling the E, observed in this study. The analysis demonstrated the strength and importance of indirect relationships that were not apparent from conventional correlation statistics. The results from 4 path analysis models showed that chl and ciliates exert an important control on natural egg production rates, through their chemical composition, despite the fact that linear correlations between phytoplankton and clliates and E, were not significant.

References

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