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JPR Advance Access published online on January 27, 2008

Journal of Plankton Research, doi:10.1093/plankt/fbn004
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© The Author 2008. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

The grazing impact of microzooplankton off south west Western Australia: As measured by the dilution technique

H. L. Paterson1,2,*, B. Knott1, A. J. Koslow3,4 and A. M. Waite2

1 The University of Western Australia, School of Animal Biology 2 The University of Western Australia, SESE 3 Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation 4 Scripps Institution of Oceanography

* The University of Western Australia, MO15, School of Environmental Systems Engineering, 35 Stirling Hwy, Crawley, WA, 6009. Harriet.Paterson{at}graduates.uwa.edu.au

Received on June 13, 2007; revised on November 15, 2008; accepted on January 10, 2008


   Abstract

Grazing rates of microzooplankton feeding on picophytoplankton (Flow-cytometry) and total phytoplankton (Chlorophyll a) were measured in the eastern Indian Ocean off south west Western Australia from February 2003 - December 2004. Three sites representing different oceanographic habitats, the coastal lagoon, the outer shelf and the continental slope (1000 m) were sampled. The dilution method of Landry and Hassett (Landry and Hassett, 1982) was used and analysed by chlorophyll a analysis and flow-cytometry. During summer the apparent growth rate of total phytoplankton exceeded loss due to microzooplankton grazing in the lagoon and at the outer shelf. On the slope, the phytoplankton assemblage was always dominated by small cells (<5 µm). Although their apparent growth rates were also higher in summer, these were matched by increasing microzooplankton grazing rates. Saturated feeding responses at the outer shelf and slope stations during summer were detected. In this low prey, low productivity environment, this response is either a new type of threshold feeding or an artefact of the dilution method which would result in an over-estimate of both phytoplankton growth and microzooplankton grazing.

Key Words: Protozoa • Marine • Indian Ocean • Coastal • Shelf


Communicating Editor: Dr Roger Harris


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