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Plankton

Plankton are the diverse collection of organisms found in water (or air) that are unable to propel themselves against a current (or wind).[1][2] The individual organisms constituting plankton are called plankters.[3] In the ocean, they provide a crucial source of food to many small and large aquatic organisms, such as bivalves, fish and whales.

Part of the contents of one dip of a hand net. The image contains diverse planktonic organisms, ranging from photosynthetic cyanobacteria and diatoms to many different types of zooplankton, including both holoplankton (permanent residents of the plankton) and meroplankton (temporary residents of the plankton, e.g., fish eggs, crab larvae, worm larvae).

Marine plankton include bacteria, archaea, algae, protozoa and drifting or floating animals that inhabit the saltwater of oceans and the brackish waters of estuaries. Freshwater plankton are similar to marine plankton, but are found in lakes and rivers.

Although plankton are usually thought of as inhabiting water, there are also airborne versions that live part of their lives drifting in the atmosphere. These aeroplankton include plant spores, pollen and wind-scattered seeds. They may also include microorganisms swept into the air from terrestrial dust storms and oceanic plankton swept into the air by sea spray.

Though many planktonic species are microscopic in size, plankton includes organisms over a wide range of sizes, including large organisms such as jellyfish.[4] This is because plankton are defined by their ecological niche and level of motility rather than by any phylogenetic or taxonomic classification. Technically, the term does not include organisms on the surface of the water, called neuston, or those that swim actively in the water, called nekton.

Terminology

 
Plankton (organisms that drift with water currents) can be contrasted with nekton (organisms that swim against water currents), neuston (organisms that live at the ocean surface) and benthos (organisms that live at the ocean floor).

The name plankton was coined by German marine biologist Victor Hensen in 1887 from shortening the word halyplankton from Greek ᾰ̔́λς háls "sea" and πλανάω planáō to "drift" or "wander".[5]: 1  While some forms are capable of independent movement and can swim hundreds of meters vertically in a single day (a behavior called diel vertical migration), their horizontal position is primarily determined by the surrounding water movement, and plankton typically flow with ocean currents. This is in contrast to nekton organisms, such as fish, squid and marine mammals, which can swim against the ambient flow and control their position in the environment.

Within the plankton, holoplankton spend their entire life cycle as plankton (e.g. most algae, copepods, salps, and some jellyfish). By contrast, meroplankton are only planktic for part of their lives (usually the larval stage), and then graduate to either a nektic (swimming) or benthic (sea floor) existence. Examples of meroplankton include the larvae of sea urchins, starfish, crustaceans, marine worms, and most fish.[6]

The amount and distribution of plankton depends on available nutrients, the state of water and a large amount of other plankton.[7]

The study of plankton is termed planktology and a planktonic individual is referred to as a plankter.[8] The adjective planktonic is widely used in both the scientific and popular literature, and is a generally accepted term. However, from the standpoint of prescriptive grammar, the less-commonly used planktic is more strictly the correct adjective. When deriving English words from their Greek or Latin roots, the gender-specific ending (in this case, "-on" which indicates the word is neuter) is normally dropped, using only the root of the word in the derivation.[9]

Trophic groups

Plankton are primarily divided into broad functional (or trophic level) groups:

Mixoplankton

  • Mixotrophs. Plankton have traditionally been categorized as producer, consumer and recycler groups, but some plankton are able to benefit from more than just one trophic level. In this mixed trophic strategy—known as mixotrophy—organisms act as both producers and consumers, either at the same time or switching between modes of nutrition in response to ambient conditions. This makes it possible to use photosynthesis for growth when nutrients and light are abundant, but switching to eat phytoplankton, zooplankton or each other when growing conditions are poor. Mixotrophs are divided into two groups; constitutive mixotrophs, CMs, which are able to perform photosynthesis on their own, and non-constitutive mixotrophs, NCMs, which use phagocytosis to engulf phototrophic prey that are either kept alive inside the host cell which benefit from its photosynthesis, or they digest their prey except for the plastids which continues to perform photosynthesis (kleptoplasty).[13]

Recognition of the importance of mixotrophy as an ecological strategy is increasing,[14] as well as the wider role this may play in marine biogeochemistry.[15] Studies have shown that mixotrophs are much more important for the marine ecology than previously assumed, and comprise more than half of all microscopic plankton.[16][17] Their presence act as a buffer that prevents the collapse of ecosystems during times with little to no light.[18]

Size groups

 
Plankton species diversity
Diverse assemblages consist of unicellular and multicellular organisms with different sizes, shapes, feeding strategies, ecological functions, life cycle characteristics, and environmental sensitivities.[19]
Courtesy of Christian Sardet/CNRS/Tara expeditions

Plankton are also often described in terms of size. Usually the following divisions are used: [20]

Group Size range
    (ESD)
Examples
Megaplankton > 20 cm metazoans; e.g. jellyfish; ctenophores; salps and pyrosomes (pelagic Tunicata); Cephalopoda; Amphipoda
Macroplankton 2→20 cm metazoans; e.g. Pteropoda; Chaetognaths; Euphausiacea (krill); Medusae; ctenophores; salps, doliolids and pyrosomes (pelagic Tunicata); Cephalopoda; Janthina and Recluzia (two genera of gastropods); Amphipoda
Mesoplankton 0.2→20 mm metazoans; e.g. copepods; Medusae; Cladocera; Ostracoda; Chaetognaths; Pteropoda; Tunicata
Microplankton 20→200 µm large eukaryotic protists; most phytoplankton; Protozoa Foraminifera; tintinnids; other ciliates; Rotifera; juvenile metazoansCrustacea (copepod nauplii)
Nanoplankton 2→20 µm small eukaryotic protists; small diatoms; small flagellates; Pyrrophyta; Chrysophyta; Chlorophyta; Xanthophyta
Picoplankton 0.2→2 µm small eukaryotic protists; bacteria; Chrysophyta
Femtoplankton < 0.2 µm marine viruses

However, some of these terms may be used with very different boundaries, especially on the larger end. The existence and importance of nano- and even smaller plankton was only discovered during the 1980s, but they are thought to make up the largest proportion of all plankton in number and diversity.

The microplankton and smaller groups are microorganisms and operate at low Reynolds numbers, where the viscosity of water is more important than its mass or inertia. [21]

Habitat groups

Marine plankton

Marine plankton includes marine bacteria and archaea, algae, protozoa and drifting or floating animals that inhabit the saltwater of oceans and the brackish waters of estuaries.

Freshwater plankton

Freshwater plankton are similar to marine plankton, but are found inland in the freshwaters of lakes and rivers.

Aeroplankton

Aeroplankton are tiny lifeforms that float and drift in the air, carried by the current of the wind; they are the atmospheric analogue to oceanic plankton. Most of the living things that make up aeroplankton are very small to microscopic in size, and many can be difficult to identify because of their tiny size. Scientists can collect them for study in traps and sweep nets from aircraft, kites or balloons.[23] Aeroplankton is made up of numerous microbes, including viruses, about 1000 different species of bacteria, around 40,000 varieties of fungi, and hundreds of species of protists, algae, mosses and liverworts that live some part of their life cycle as aeroplankton, often as spores, pollen, and wind-scattered seeds. Additionally, peripatetic microorganisms are swept into the air from terrestrial dust storms, and an even larger amount of airborne marine microorganisms are propelled high into the atmosphere in sea spray. Aeroplankton deposits hundreds of millions of airborne viruses and tens of millions of bacteria every day on every square meter around the planet.

The sea surface microlayer, compared to the sub-surface waters, contains elevated concentration of bacteria and viruses.[24][25] These materials can be transferred from the sea-surface to the atmosphere in the form of wind-generated aqueous aerosols due to their high vapour tension and a process known as volatilisation.[26] When airborne, these microbes can be transported long distances to coastal regions. If they hit land they can have an effect on animal, vegetation and human health.[27] Marine aerosols that contain viruses can travel hundreds of kilometers from their source and remain in liquid form as long as the humidity is high enough (over 70%).[28][29][30] These aerosols are able to remain suspended in the atmosphere for about 31 days.[31] Evidence suggests that bacteria can remain viable after being transported inland through aerosols. Some reached as far as 200 meters at 30 meters above sea level.[32] The process which transfers this material to the atmosphere causes further enrichment in both bacteria and viruses in comparison to either the SML or sub-surface waters (up to three orders of magnitude in some locations).[32]

Geoplankton

Many animals live in terrestrial environments by thriving in transient often microscopic bodies of water and moisture, these include rotifers and gastrotrichs which lay resilient eggs capable of surviving years in dry environments, and some of which can go dormant themselves. Nematodes are usually microscopic with this lifestyle. Water bears, despite only having lifespans of a few months, famously can enter suspended animation during dry or hostile conditions and survive for decades. This allows them to be ubiquitous in terrestrial environments despite needing water to grow and reproduce. Many microscopic crustacean groups like copepods and amphipods (of which sandhoppers are members) and seed shrimp are known to go dormant when dry and live in transient bodies of water too[33]

Other groups

Gelatinous zooplankton

 
Jellyfish are gelatinous zooplankton.[34]

Gelatinous zooplankton are fragile animals that live in the water column in the ocean. Their delicate bodies have no hard parts and are easily damaged or destroyed.[35] Gelatinous zooplankton are often transparent.[36] All jellyfish are gelatinous zooplankton, but not all gelatinous zooplankton are jellyfish. The most commonly encountered organisms include ctenophores, medusae, salps, and Chaetognatha in coastal waters. However, almost all marine phyla, including Annelida, Mollusca and Arthropoda, contain gelatinous species, but many of those odd species live in the open ocean and the deep sea and are less available to the casual ocean observer.[37]

Ichthyoplankton

 
Salmon egg hatching into a sac fry. In a few days, the sac fry will absorb the yolk sac and start feeding on smaller plankton.

Ichthyoplankton are the eggs and larvae of fish. They are mostly found in the sunlit zone of the water column, less than 200 metres deep, which is sometimes called the epipelagic or photic zone. Ichthyoplankton are planktonic, meaning they cannot swim effectively under their own power, but must drift with the ocean currents. Fish eggs cannot swim at all, and are unambiguously planktonic. Early stage larvae swim poorly, but later stage larvae swim better and cease to be planktonic as they grow into juveniles. Fish larvae are part of the zooplankton that eat smaller plankton, while fish eggs carry their own food supply. Both eggs and larvae are themselves eaten by larger animals.[38][39] Fish can produce high numbers of eggs which are often released into the open water column. Fish eggs typically have a diameter of about 1 millimetre (0.039 in). The newly hatched young of oviparous fish are called larvae. They are usually poorly formed, carry a large yolk sac (for nourishment) and are very different in appearance from juvenile and adult specimens. The larval period in oviparous fish is relatively short (usually only several weeks), and larvae rapidly grow and change appearance and structure (a process termed metamorphosis) to become juveniles. During this transition larvae must switch from their yolk sac to feeding on zooplankton prey, a process which depends on typically inadequate zooplankton density, starving many larvae. In time fish larvae become able to swim against currents, at which point they cease to be plankton and become juvenile fish.

Holoplankton

 

Holoplankton are organisms that are planktic for their entire life cycle. Holoplankton can be contrasted with meroplankton, which are planktic organisms that spend part of their life cycle in the benthic zone. Examples of holoplankton include some diatoms, radiolarians, some dinoflagellates, foraminifera, amphipods, krill, copepods, and salps, as well as some gastropod mollusk species. Holoplankton dwell in the pelagic zone as opposed to the benthic zone.[41] Holoplankton include both phytoplankton and zooplankton and vary in size. The most common plankton are protists.[42]

Meroplankton

 
Larva stage of a spiny lobster

Meroplankton are a wide variety of aquatic organisms which have both planktonic and benthic stages in their life cycles. Much of the meroplankton consists of larval stages of larger organism.[33] Meroplankton can be contrasted with holoplankton, which are planktonic organisms that stay in the pelagic zone as plankton throughout their entire life cycle.[43] After a period of time in the plankton, many meroplankton graduate to the nekton or adopt a benthic (often sessile) lifestyle on the seafloor. The larval stages of benthic invertebrates make up a significant proportion of planktonic communities.[44] The planktonic larval stage is particularly crucial to many benthic invertebrate in order to disperse their young. Depending on the particular species and the environmental conditions, larval or juvenile-stage meroplankton may remain in the pelagic zone for durations ranging from hour to months.[33]

Pseudoplankton

Pseudoplankton are organisms that attach themselves to planktonic organisms or other floating objects, such as drifting wood, buoyant shells of organisms such as Spirula, or man-made flotsam. Examples include goose barnacles and the bryozoan Jellyella. By themselves these animals cannot float, which contrasts them with true planktonic organisms, such as Velella and the Portuguese Man o' War, which are buoyant. Pseudoplankton are often found in the guts of filtering zooplankters.[45]

Tychoplankton

Tychoplankton are organisms, such as free-living or attached benthic organisms and other non-planktonic organisms, that are carried into the plankton through a disturbance of their benthic habitat, or by winds and currents.[46] This can occur by direct turbulence or by disruption of the substrate and subsequent entrainment in the water column.[46][47] Tychoplankton are, therefore, a primary subdivision for sorting planktonic organisms by duration of lifecycle spent in the plankton, as neither their entire lives nor particular reproductive portions are confined to planktonic existence.[48] Tychoplankton are sometimes called accidental plankton.

Mineralized plankton

Distribution

 
World concentrations of surface ocean chlorophyll as viewed by satellite during the northern spring, averaged from 1998 to 2004. Chlorophyll is a marker for the distribution and abundance of phytoplankton.

Apart from aeroplankton, plankton inhabits oceans, seas, lakes and ponds. Local abundance varies horizontally, vertically and seasonally. The primary cause of this variability is the availability of light. All plankton ecosystems are driven by the input of solar energy (but see chemosynthesis), confining primary production to surface waters, and to geographical regions and seasons having abundant light.

A secondary variable is nutrient availability. Although large areas of the tropical and sub-tropical oceans have abundant light, they experience relatively low primary production because they offer limited nutrients such as nitrate, phosphate and silicate. This results from large-scale ocean circulation and water column stratification. In such regions, primary production usually occurs at greater depth, although at a reduced level (because of reduced light).

Despite significant macronutrient concentrations, some ocean regions are unproductive (so-called HNLC regions).[49] The micronutrient iron is deficient in these regions, and adding it can lead to the formation of phytoplankton algal blooms.[50] Iron primarily reaches the ocean through the deposition of dust on the sea surface. Paradoxically, oceanic areas adjacent to unproductive, arid land thus typically have abundant phytoplankton (e.g., the eastern Atlantic Ocean, where trade winds bring dust from the Sahara Desert in north Africa).

While plankton are most abundant in surface waters, they live throughout the water column. At depths where no primary production occurs, zooplankton and bacterioplankton instead consume organic material sinking from more productive surface waters above. This flux of sinking material, so-called marine snow, can be especially high following the termination of spring blooms.

The local distribution of plankton can be affected by wind-driven Langmuir circulation and the biological effects of this physical process.

Ecological significance

Food chain

External video
  The Secret Life of Plankton - YouTube

Aside from representing the bottom few levels of a food chain that supports commercially important fisheries, plankton ecosystems play a role in the biogeochemical cycles of many important chemical elements, including the ocean's carbon cycle.[51] Fish larvae mainly eat zooplankton, which in turn eat phytoplankton[52]

Carbon cycle

Primarily by grazing on phytoplankton, zooplankton provide carbon to the planktic foodweb, either respiring it to provide metabolic energy, or upon death as biomass or detritus. Organic material tends to be denser than seawater, so it sinks into open ocean ecosystems away from the coastlines, transporting carbon along with it. This process, called the biological pump, is one reason that oceans constitute the largest carbon sink on Earth. However, it has been shown to be influenced by increments of temperature.[53][54][55][56] In 2019, a study indicated that at ongoing rates of seawater acidification, Antarctic phytoplanktons could become smaller and less effective at storing carbon before the end of the century.[57]

It might be possible to increase the ocean's uptake of carbon dioxide (CO
2
) generated through human activities by increasing plankton production through iron fertilization – introducing amounts of iron into the ocean. However, this technique may not be practical at a large scale. Ocean oxygen depletion and resultant methane production (caused by the excess production remineralising at depth) is one potential drawback.[58][59]

Oxygen production

Phytoplankton absorb energy from the Sun and nutrients from the water to produce their own nourishment or energy. In the process of photosynthesis, phytoplankton release molecular oxygen (O
2
) into the water as a waste byproduct. It is estimated that about 50% of the world's oxygen is produced via phytoplankton photosynthesis.[60] The rest is produced via photosynthesis on land by plants.[60] Furthermore, phytoplankton photosynthesis has controlled the atmospheric CO
2
/O
2
balance since the early Precambrian Eon.[61]

Absorption efficiency

The absorption efficiency (AE) of plankton is the proportion of food absorbed by the plankton that determines how available the consumed organic materials are in meeting the required physiological demands.[62] Depending on the feeding rate and prey composition, variations in absorption efficiency may lead to variations in fecal pellet production, and thus regulates how much organic material is recycled back to the marine environment. Low feeding rates typically lead to high absorption efficiency and small, dense pellets, while high feeding rates typically lead to low absorption efficiency and larger pellets with more organic content. Another contributing factor to dissolved organic matter (DOM) release is respiration rate. Physical factors such as oxygen availability, pH, and light conditions may affect overall oxygen consumption and how much carbon is loss from zooplankton in the form of respired CO2. The relative sizes of zooplankton and prey also mediate how much carbon is released via sloppy feeding. Smaller prey are ingested whole, whereas larger prey may be fed on more “sloppily”, that is more biomatter is released through inefficient consumption.[63][64] There is also evidence that diet composition can impact nutrient release, with carnivorous diets releasing more dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and ammonium than omnivorous diets.[65]

Biomass variability

The growth of phytoplankton populations is dependent on light levels and nutrient availability. The chief factor limiting growth varies from region to region in the world's oceans. On a broad scale, growth of phytoplankton in the oligotrophic tropical and subtropical gyres is generally limited by nutrient supply, while light often limits phytoplankton growth in subarctic gyres. Environmental variability at multiple scales influences the nutrient and light available for phytoplankton, and as these organisms form the base of the marine food web, this variability in phytoplankton growth influences higher trophic levels. For example, at interannual scales phytoplankton levels temporarily plummet during El Niño periods, influencing populations of zooplankton, fishes, sea birds, and marine mammals.

The effects of anthropogenic warming on the global population of phytoplankton is an area of active research. Changes in the vertical stratification of the water column, the rate of temperature-dependent biological reactions, and the atmospheric supply of nutrients are expected to have important impacts on future phytoplankton productivity.[66] Additionally, changes in the mortality of phytoplankton due to rates of zooplankton grazing may be significant.

 
Marine phytoplankton cycling throughout water column
 
Amphipod with curved exoskeleton and two long and two short antennae

Plankton diversity

Planktonic Relationships

Fish & plankton

Zooplankton are the initial prey item for almost all fish larvae as they switch from their yolk sacs to external feeding. Fish rely on the density and distribution of zooplankton to match that of new larvae, which can otherwise starve. Natural factors (e.g., current variations, temperature changes) and man-made factors (e.g. river dams, ocean acidification, rising temperatures) can strongly affect zooplankton, which can in turn strongly affect larval survival, and therefore breeding success.

It's been shown that plankton can be patchy in marine environments where there aren't significant fish populations and additionally, where fish are abundant, zooplankton dynamics are influenced by the fish predation rate in their environment. Depending on the predation rate, they could express regular or chaotic behavior.[68]

A negative effect that fish larvae can have on planktonic algal blooms is that the larvae will prolong the blooming event by diminishing available zooplankton numbers; this in turn permits excessive phytoplankton growth allowing the bloom to flourish .[52]

The importance of both phytoplankton and zooplankton is also well-recognized in extensive and semi-intensive pond fish farming. Plankton population-based pond management strategies for fish rearing have been practiced by traditional fish farmers for decades, illustrating the importance of plankton even in man-made environments.

Whales & plankton

Of all animal fecal matter, it is whale feces that is the 'trophy' in terms of increasing nutrient availability. Phytoplankton are the powerhouse of open ocean primary production and they can acquire many nutrients from whale feces.[69] In the marine food web, phytoplankton are at the base of the food web and are consumed by zooplankton & krill, which are preyed upon by larger and larger marine organisms, including whales, so it can be said that whale poop fuels the entire food web.

Humans & plankton

Plankton have many direct and indirect effects on humans.

Around 70% of the oxygen in the atmosphere is produced in the oceans from phytoplankton performing photosynthesis, meaning that the majority of the oxygen available for us and other organisms that respire aerobically is produced by plankton.[70]

Plankton also make up the base of the marine food web, providing food for all the trophic levels above. Recent studies have analyzed the marine food web to see if the system runs on a top-down or bottom-up approach. Essentially, this research is focused on understanding whether changes in the food web are driven by nutrients at the bottom of the food web or predators at the top. The general conclusion is that the bottom-up approach seemed to be more predictive of food web behavior.[71] This indicates that plankton have more sway in determining the success of the primary consumer species that prey on them than do the secondary consumers that prey on the primary consumers.

In some cases, plankton act as an intermediate host for deadly parasites in humans. One such case is that of cholera, an infection caused by several strains of Vibrio cholerae. These species have been shown to have a symbiotic relationship with chitinous zooplankton species like copepods. These bacteria benefit not only from the food provided by the chiton from the zooplankton, but also from the protection from acidic environments. Once the copepods have been ingested by a human host, the chitinous exterior protects the bacteria from the stomach acids in the stomach and proceed to the intestines. Once there, the bacteria bind with the surface of the small intestine and the host will start developing symptoms, including extreme diarrhea, within five days.[72]

See also

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Further reading

  • Kirby, Richard R. (2010). Ocean Drifters: A Secret World Beneath the Waves. Studio Cactus Ltd, UK. ISBN 978-1-904239-10-9.
  • Dusenbery, David B. (2009). Living at Micro Scale: The Unexpected Physics of Being Small. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts ISBN 978-0-674-03116-6.
  • Kiørboe, Thomas (2008). A Mechanistic Approach to Plankton Ecology. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. ISBN 978-0-691-13422-2.
  • Dolan, J.R., Agatha, S., Coats, D.W., Montagnes, D.J.S., Stocker, D.K., eds. (2013).Biology and Ecology of Tintinnid Ciliates: Models for Marine Plankton. Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford, UK ISBN 978-0-470-67151-1.

External links

  • Ocean Drifters – Short film narrated by David Attenborough about the varied roles of plankton
  • Plankton Chronicles 2020-07-28 at the Wayback Machine – Short documentary films and photos
  • COPEPOD: The Global Plankton Database – Global coverage database of zooplankton biomass and abundance data
  • Plankton*Net – Taxonomic database of images of plankton species
  • – Tasmanian Aquaculture and Fisheries Institute
  • – Continuous Plankton Recorder Survey
  • – Integrated Marine Observing System
  • Sea Drifters – BBC Audio slideshow
  • [1] – Images of planktonic microorganisms
  • – Essays on nomenclature
  • Journal of Plankton Research[dead link] – Scientific periodical devoted to plankton

plankton, this, article, about, marine, organisms, other, uses, disambiguation, diverse, collection, organisms, found, water, that, unable, propel, themselves, against, current, wind, individual, organisms, constituting, plankton, called, plankters, ocean, the. This article is about the marine organisms For other uses see Plankton disambiguation Plankton are the diverse collection of organisms found in water or air that are unable to propel themselves against a current or wind 1 2 The individual organisms constituting plankton are called plankters 3 In the ocean they provide a crucial source of food to many small and large aquatic organisms such as bivalves fish and whales Marine microplankton and mesoplankton Part of the contents of one dip of a hand net The image contains diverse planktonic organisms ranging from photosynthetic cyanobacteria and diatoms to many different types of zooplankton including both holoplankton permanent residents of the plankton and meroplankton temporary residents of the plankton e g fish eggs crab larvae worm larvae Marine plankton include bacteria archaea algae protozoa and drifting or floating animals that inhabit the saltwater of oceans and the brackish waters of estuaries Freshwater plankton are similar to marine plankton but are found in lakes and rivers Although plankton are usually thought of as inhabiting water there are also airborne versions that live part of their lives drifting in the atmosphere These aeroplankton include plant spores pollen and wind scattered seeds They may also include microorganisms swept into the air from terrestrial dust storms and oceanic plankton swept into the air by sea spray Though many planktonic species are microscopic in size plankton includes organisms over a wide range of sizes including large organisms such as jellyfish 4 This is because plankton are defined by their ecological niche and level of motility rather than by any phylogenetic or taxonomic classification Technically the term does not include organisms on the surface of the water called neuston or those that swim actively in the water called nekton Contents 1 Terminology 2 Trophic groups 2 1 Mixoplankton 3 Size groups 4 Habitat groups 4 1 Marine plankton 4 2 Freshwater plankton 4 3 Aeroplankton 4 4 Geoplankton 5 Other groups 5 1 Gelatinous zooplankton 5 2 Ichthyoplankton 5 3 Holoplankton 5 4 Meroplankton 5 5 Pseudoplankton 5 6 Tychoplankton 5 7 Mineralized plankton 6 Distribution 7 Ecological significance 7 1 Food chain 7 2 Carbon cycle 7 3 Oxygen production 7 4 Absorption efficiency 8 Biomass variability 9 Plankton diversity 10 Planktonic Relationships 10 1 Humans amp plankton 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksTerminology Edit Plankton organisms that drift with water currents can be contrasted with nekton organisms that swim against water currents neuston organisms that live at the ocean surface and benthos organisms that live at the ocean floor The name plankton was coined by German marine biologist Victor Hensen in 1887 from shortening the word halyplankton from Greek ᾰ ls hals sea and planaw planaō to drift or wander 5 1 While some forms are capable of independent movement and can swim hundreds of meters vertically in a single day a behavior called diel vertical migration their horizontal position is primarily determined by the surrounding water movement and plankton typically flow with ocean currents This is in contrast to nekton organisms such as fish squid and marine mammals which can swim against the ambient flow and control their position in the environment Within the plankton holoplankton spend their entire life cycle as plankton e g most algae copepods salps and some jellyfish By contrast meroplankton are only planktic for part of their lives usually the larval stage and then graduate to either a nektic swimming or benthic sea floor existence Examples of meroplankton include the larvae of sea urchins starfish crustaceans marine worms and most fish 6 The amount and distribution of plankton depends on available nutrients the state of water and a large amount of other plankton 7 The study of plankton is termed planktology and a planktonic individual is referred to as a plankter 8 The adjective planktonic is widely used in both the scientific and popular literature and is a generally accepted term However from the standpoint of prescriptive grammar the less commonly used planktic is more strictly the correct adjective When deriving English words from their Greek or Latin roots the gender specific ending in this case on which indicates the word is neuter is normally dropped using only the root of the word in the derivation 9 Some marine diatoms a key phytoplankton group The amphipod Hyperia macrocephala part of the zooplanktonTrophic groups EditPlankton are primarily divided into broad functional or trophic level groups Phytoplankton from Greek phyton or plant are autotrophic prokaryotic or eukaryotic algae that live near the water surface where there is sufficient light to support photosynthesis Among the more important groups are the diatoms cyanobacteria dinoflagellates and coccolithophores Zooplankton from Greek zoon or animal are small protozoans or metazoans e g crustaceans and other animals that feed on other plankton Some of the eggs and larvae of larger nektonic animals such as fish crustaceans and annelids are included here Mycoplankton include fungi and fungus like organisms which like bacterioplankton are also significant in remineralisation and nutrient cycling 10 Bacterioplankton include bacteria and archaea which play an important role in remineralising organic material down the water column note that prokaryotic phytoplankton are also bacterioplankton Virioplankton are viruses Viruses are more abundant in the plankton than bacteria and archaea though much smaller 11 12 Mixoplankton Edit Further information Marine microorganisms Mixotrophs and Mixotrophic dinoflagellate Mixotrophs Plankton have traditionally been categorized as producer consumer and recycler groups but some plankton are able to benefit from more than just one trophic level In this mixed trophic strategy known as mixotrophy organisms act as both producers and consumers either at the same time or switching between modes of nutrition in response to ambient conditions This makes it possible to use photosynthesis for growth when nutrients and light are abundant but switching to eat phytoplankton zooplankton or each other when growing conditions are poor Mixotrophs are divided into two groups constitutive mixotrophs CMs which are able to perform photosynthesis on their own and non constitutive mixotrophs NCMs which use phagocytosis to engulf phototrophic prey that are either kept alive inside the host cell which benefit from its photosynthesis or they digest their prey except for the plastids which continues to perform photosynthesis kleptoplasty 13 Recognition of the importance of mixotrophy as an ecological strategy is increasing 14 as well as the wider role this may play in marine biogeochemistry 15 Studies have shown that mixotrophs are much more important for the marine ecology than previously assumed and comprise more than half of all microscopic plankton 16 17 Their presence act as a buffer that prevents the collapse of ecosystems during times with little to no light 18 Size groups Edit Plankton species diversity Diverse assemblages consist of unicellular and multicellular organisms with different sizes shapes feeding strategies ecological functions life cycle characteristics and environmental sensitivities 19 Courtesy of Christian Sardet CNRS Tara expeditions Plankton are also often described in terms of size Usually the following divisions are used 20 Group Size range ESD ExamplesMegaplankton gt 20 cm metazoans e g jellyfish ctenophores salps and pyrosomes pelagic Tunicata Cephalopoda AmphipodaMacroplankton 2 20 cm metazoans e g Pteropoda Chaetognaths Euphausiacea krill Medusae ctenophores salps doliolids and pyrosomes pelagic Tunicata Cephalopoda Janthina and Recluzia two genera of gastropods AmphipodaMesoplankton 0 2 20 mm metazoans e g copepods Medusae Cladocera Ostracoda Chaetognaths Pteropoda TunicataMicroplankton 20 200 µm large eukaryotic protists most phytoplankton Protozoa Foraminifera tintinnids other ciliates Rotifera juvenile metazoans Crustacea copepod nauplii Nanoplankton 2 20 µm small eukaryotic protists small diatoms small flagellates Pyrrophyta Chrysophyta Chlorophyta XanthophytaPicoplankton 0 2 2 µm small eukaryotic protists bacteria ChrysophytaFemtoplankton lt 0 2 µm marine viruses dd However some of these terms may be used with very different boundaries especially on the larger end The existence and importance of nano and even smaller plankton was only discovered during the 1980s but they are thought to make up the largest proportion of all plankton in number and diversity The microplankton and smaller groups are microorganisms and operate at low Reynolds numbers where the viscosity of water is more important than its mass or inertia 21 Plankton sizes by taxonomic groups 22 Habitat groups EditMarine plankton Edit Marine plankton includes marine bacteria and archaea algae protozoa and drifting or floating animals that inhabit the saltwater of oceans and the brackish waters of estuaries Freshwater plankton Edit Freshwater plankton are similar to marine plankton but are found inland in the freshwaters of lakes and rivers Aeroplankton Edit Sea spray containing marine microorganisms can be swept high into the atmosphere and may travel the globe as aeroplankton before falling back to earth Main article Aeroplankton Aeroplankton are tiny lifeforms that float and drift in the air carried by the current of the wind they are the atmospheric analogue to oceanic plankton Most of the living things that make up aeroplankton are very small to microscopic in size and many can be difficult to identify because of their tiny size Scientists can collect them for study in traps and sweep nets from aircraft kites or balloons 23 Aeroplankton is made up of numerous microbes including viruses about 1000 different species of bacteria around 40 000 varieties of fungi and hundreds of species of protists algae mosses and liverworts that live some part of their life cycle as aeroplankton often as spores pollen and wind scattered seeds Additionally peripatetic microorganisms are swept into the air from terrestrial dust storms and an even larger amount of airborne marine microorganisms are propelled high into the atmosphere in sea spray Aeroplankton deposits hundreds of millions of airborne viruses and tens of millions of bacteria every day on every square meter around the planet The sea surface microlayer compared to the sub surface waters contains elevated concentration of bacteria and viruses 24 25 These materials can be transferred from the sea surface to the atmosphere in the form of wind generated aqueous aerosols due to their high vapour tension and a process known as volatilisation 26 When airborne these microbes can be transported long distances to coastal regions If they hit land they can have an effect on animal vegetation and human health 27 Marine aerosols that contain viruses can travel hundreds of kilometers from their source and remain in liquid form as long as the humidity is high enough over 70 28 29 30 These aerosols are able to remain suspended in the atmosphere for about 31 days 31 Evidence suggests that bacteria can remain viable after being transported inland through aerosols Some reached as far as 200 meters at 30 meters above sea level 32 The process which transfers this material to the atmosphere causes further enrichment in both bacteria and viruses in comparison to either the SML or sub surface waters up to three orders of magnitude in some locations 32 Geoplankton Edit See also Geoplankton Many animals live in terrestrial environments by thriving in transient often microscopic bodies of water and moisture these include rotifers and gastrotrichs which lay resilient eggs capable of surviving years in dry environments and some of which can go dormant themselves Nematodes are usually microscopic with this lifestyle Water bears despite only having lifespans of a few months famously can enter suspended animation during dry or hostile conditions and survive for decades This allows them to be ubiquitous in terrestrial environments despite needing water to grow and reproduce Many microscopic crustacean groups like copepods and amphipods of which sandhoppers are members and seed shrimp are known to go dormant when dry and live in transient bodies of water too 33 Other groups EditGelatinous zooplankton Edit Jellyfish are gelatinous zooplankton 34 Main article Gelatinous zooplankton Gelatinous zooplankton are fragile animals that live in the water column in the ocean Their delicate bodies have no hard parts and are easily damaged or destroyed 35 Gelatinous zooplankton are often transparent 36 All jellyfish are gelatinous zooplankton but not all gelatinous zooplankton are jellyfish The most commonly encountered organisms include ctenophores medusae salps and Chaetognatha in coastal waters However almost all marine phyla including Annelida Mollusca and Arthropoda contain gelatinous species but many of those odd species live in the open ocean and the deep sea and are less available to the casual ocean observer 37 Ichthyoplankton Edit Main article Ichthyoplankton Salmon egg hatching into a sac fry In a few days the sac fry will absorb the yolk sac and start feeding on smaller plankton Ichthyoplankton are the eggs and larvae of fish They are mostly found in the sunlit zone of the water column less than 200 metres deep which is sometimes called the epipelagic or photic zone Ichthyoplankton are planktonic meaning they cannot swim effectively under their own power but must drift with the ocean currents Fish eggs cannot swim at all and are unambiguously planktonic Early stage larvae swim poorly but later stage larvae swim better and cease to be planktonic as they grow into juveniles Fish larvae are part of the zooplankton that eat smaller plankton while fish eggs carry their own food supply Both eggs and larvae are themselves eaten by larger animals 38 39 Fish can produce high numbers of eggs which are often released into the open water column Fish eggs typically have a diameter of about 1 millimetre 0 039 in The newly hatched young of oviparous fish are called larvae They are usually poorly formed carry a large yolk sac for nourishment and are very different in appearance from juvenile and adult specimens The larval period in oviparous fish is relatively short usually only several weeks and larvae rapidly grow and change appearance and structure a process termed metamorphosis to become juveniles During this transition larvae must switch from their yolk sac to feeding on zooplankton prey a process which depends on typically inadequate zooplankton density starving many larvae In time fish larvae become able to swim against currents at which point they cease to be plankton and become juvenile fish Holoplankton Edit Main article Holoplankton Tomopteris a holoplanktic bioluminescence polychaete worm 40 Holoplankton are organisms that are planktic for their entire life cycle Holoplankton can be contrasted with meroplankton which are planktic organisms that spend part of their life cycle in the benthic zone Examples of holoplankton include some diatoms radiolarians some dinoflagellates foraminifera amphipods krill copepods and salps as well as some gastropod mollusk species Holoplankton dwell in the pelagic zone as opposed to the benthic zone 41 Holoplankton include both phytoplankton and zooplankton and vary in size The most common plankton are protists 42 Meroplankton Edit Larva stage of a spiny lobster Main article Meroplankton Meroplankton are a wide variety of aquatic organisms which have both planktonic and benthic stages in their life cycles Much of the meroplankton consists of larval stages of larger organism 33 Meroplankton can be contrasted with holoplankton which are planktonic organisms that stay in the pelagic zone as plankton throughout their entire life cycle 43 After a period of time in the plankton many meroplankton graduate to the nekton or adopt a benthic often sessile lifestyle on the seafloor The larval stages of benthic invertebrates make up a significant proportion of planktonic communities 44 The planktonic larval stage is particularly crucial to many benthic invertebrate in order to disperse their young Depending on the particular species and the environmental conditions larval or juvenile stage meroplankton may remain in the pelagic zone for durations ranging from hour to months 33 Pseudoplankton Edit Main article Pseudoplankton Pseudoplankton are organisms that attach themselves to planktonic organisms or other floating objects such as drifting wood buoyant shells of organisms such as Spirula or man made flotsam Examples include goose barnacles and the bryozoan Jellyella By themselves these animals cannot float which contrasts them with true planktonic organisms such as Velella and the Portuguese Man o War which are buoyant Pseudoplankton are often found in the guts of filtering zooplankters 45 Tychoplankton Edit Main article Tychoplankton Tychoplankton are organisms such as free living or attached benthic organisms and other non planktonic organisms that are carried into the plankton through a disturbance of their benthic habitat or by winds and currents 46 This can occur by direct turbulence or by disruption of the substrate and subsequent entrainment in the water column 46 47 Tychoplankton are therefore a primary subdivision for sorting planktonic organisms by duration of lifecycle spent in the plankton as neither their entire lives nor particular reproductive portions are confined to planktonic existence 48 Tychoplankton are sometimes called accidental plankton Mineralized plankton Edit See also protist shells and biomineralization Some planktons are protected with mineralized shells or tests Diatoms have glass shells frustules and produce much of the world s oxygen The elaborate silica shells of microscopic marine radiolarians can eventually produce opal Coccolithophores have chalk plates called coccoliths and produced the Cliffs of Dover Planktonic algae bloom of coccolithophores off the southern coast of England Foraminiferans have calcium carbonate shells and produced the limestone in the Great Pyramids Distribution Edit World concentrations of surface ocean chlorophyll as viewed by satellite during the northern spring averaged from 1998 to 2004 Chlorophyll is a marker for the distribution and abundance of phytoplankton Apart from aeroplankton plankton inhabits oceans seas lakes and ponds Local abundance varies horizontally vertically and seasonally The primary cause of this variability is the availability of light All plankton ecosystems are driven by the input of solar energy but see chemosynthesis confining primary production to surface waters and to geographical regions and seasons having abundant light A secondary variable is nutrient availability Although large areas of the tropical and sub tropical oceans have abundant light they experience relatively low primary production because they offer limited nutrients such as nitrate phosphate and silicate This results from large scale ocean circulation and water column stratification In such regions primary production usually occurs at greater depth although at a reduced level because of reduced light Despite significant macronutrient concentrations some ocean regions are unproductive so called HNLC regions 49 The micronutrient iron is deficient in these regions and adding it can lead to the formation of phytoplankton algal blooms 50 Iron primarily reaches the ocean through the deposition of dust on the sea surface Paradoxically oceanic areas adjacent to unproductive arid land thus typically have abundant phytoplankton e g the eastern Atlantic Ocean where trade winds bring dust from the Sahara Desert in north Africa While plankton are most abundant in surface waters they live throughout the water column At depths where no primary production occurs zooplankton and bacterioplankton instead consume organic material sinking from more productive surface waters above This flux of sinking material so called marine snow can be especially high following the termination of spring blooms The local distribution of plankton can be affected by wind driven Langmuir circulation and the biological effects of this physical process Ecological significance EditFood chain Edit External video The Secret Life of Plankton YouTubeSee also marine food web Aside from representing the bottom few levels of a food chain that supports commercially important fisheries plankton ecosystems play a role in the biogeochemical cycles of many important chemical elements including the ocean s carbon cycle 51 Fish larvae mainly eat zooplankton which in turn eat phytoplankton 52 Carbon cycle Edit See also ocean carbon cycle and biological pump Primarily by grazing on phytoplankton zooplankton provide carbon to the planktic foodweb either respiring it to provide metabolic energy or upon death as biomass or detritus Organic material tends to be denser than seawater so it sinks into open ocean ecosystems away from the coastlines transporting carbon along with it This process called the biological pump is one reason that oceans constitute the largest carbon sink on Earth However it has been shown to be influenced by increments of temperature 53 54 55 56 In 2019 a study indicated that at ongoing rates of seawater acidification Antarctic phytoplanktons could become smaller and less effective at storing carbon before the end of the century 57 It might be possible to increase the ocean s uptake of carbon dioxide CO2 generated through human activities by increasing plankton production through iron fertilization introducing amounts of iron into the ocean However this technique may not be practical at a large scale Ocean oxygen depletion and resultant methane production caused by the excess production remineralising at depth is one potential drawback 58 59 Oxygen production Edit See also oxygen cycle Phytoplankton absorb energy from the Sun and nutrients from the water to produce their own nourishment or energy In the process of photosynthesis phytoplankton release molecular oxygen O2 into the water as a waste byproduct It is estimated that about 50 of the world s oxygen is produced via phytoplankton photosynthesis 60 The rest is produced via photosynthesis on land by plants 60 Furthermore phytoplankton photosynthesis has controlled the atmospheric CO2 O2 balance since the early Precambrian Eon 61 Absorption efficiency Edit See also biological pump The absorption efficiency AE of plankton is the proportion of food absorbed by the plankton that determines how available the consumed organic materials are in meeting the required physiological demands 62 Depending on the feeding rate and prey composition variations in absorption efficiency may lead to variations in fecal pellet production and thus regulates how much organic material is recycled back to the marine environment Low feeding rates typically lead to high absorption efficiency and small dense pellets while high feeding rates typically lead to low absorption efficiency and larger pellets with more organic content Another contributing factor to dissolved organic matter DOM release is respiration rate Physical factors such as oxygen availability pH and light conditions may affect overall oxygen consumption and how much carbon is loss from zooplankton in the form of respired CO2 The relative sizes of zooplankton and prey also mediate how much carbon is released via sloppy feeding Smaller prey are ingested whole whereas larger prey may be fed on more sloppily that is more biomatter is released through inefficient consumption 63 64 There is also evidence that diet composition can impact nutrient release with carnivorous diets releasing more dissolved organic carbon DOC and ammonium than omnivorous diets 65 Biomass variability EditThe growth of phytoplankton populations is dependent on light levels and nutrient availability The chief factor limiting growth varies from region to region in the world s oceans On a broad scale growth of phytoplankton in the oligotrophic tropical and subtropical gyres is generally limited by nutrient supply while light often limits phytoplankton growth in subarctic gyres Environmental variability at multiple scales influences the nutrient and light available for phytoplankton and as these organisms form the base of the marine food web this variability in phytoplankton growth influences higher trophic levels For example at interannual scales phytoplankton levels temporarily plummet during El Nino periods influencing populations of zooplankton fishes sea birds and marine mammals The effects of anthropogenic warming on the global population of phytoplankton is an area of active research Changes in the vertical stratification of the water column the rate of temperature dependent biological reactions and the atmospheric supply of nutrients are expected to have important impacts on future phytoplankton productivity 66 Additionally changes in the mortality of phytoplankton due to rates of zooplankton grazing may be significant Marine phytoplankton cycling throughout water column Amphipod with curved exoskeleton and two long and two short antennaePlankton diversity EditSome of the diversity found in plankton Pelagibacter ubique the most common bacteria in the ocean plays a major role in global carbon cycles The tiny cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus is a major contributor to atmospheric oxygen The sea sparkle dinoflagellate glows in the night to produce the milky seas effect Copepod from Antarctica a translucent ovoid animal with two long antennae Herring larva imaged with the remains of the yolk and the long gut visible in the transparent animal Icefish larvae from Antarctica have no haemoglobin The sea walnut ctenophore has a transient anus which forms only when it needs to defecate 67 Eel larva drifting with the gulf stream Antarctic krill probably the largest biomass of a single species on the planet Microzooplankton are major grazers of the plankton two dinoflagellates and a tintinnid ciliate Sargassum seaweed drifts with currents using air bladders to stay afloat Planktonic sea foam bubbles with image of photographer Macroplankton a Janthina janthina snail with bubble float cast up onto a beach in MauiPlanktonic Relationships EditFish amp planktonZooplankton are the initial prey item for almost all fish larvae as they switch from their yolk sacs to external feeding Fish rely on the density and distribution of zooplankton to match that of new larvae which can otherwise starve Natural factors e g current variations temperature changes and man made factors e g river dams ocean acidification rising temperatures can strongly affect zooplankton which can in turn strongly affect larval survival and therefore breeding success It s been shown that plankton can be patchy in marine environments where there aren t significant fish populations and additionally where fish are abundant zooplankton dynamics are influenced by the fish predation rate in their environment Depending on the predation rate they could express regular or chaotic behavior 68 A negative effect that fish larvae can have on planktonic algal blooms is that the larvae will prolong the blooming event by diminishing available zooplankton numbers this in turn permits excessive phytoplankton growth allowing the bloom to flourish 52 The importance of both phytoplankton and zooplankton is also well recognized in extensive and semi intensive pond fish farming Plankton population based pond management strategies for fish rearing have been practiced by traditional fish farmers for decades illustrating the importance of plankton even in man made environments Whales amp planktonOf all animal fecal matter it is whale feces that is the trophy in terms of increasing nutrient availability Phytoplankton are the powerhouse of open ocean primary production and they can acquire many nutrients from whale feces 69 In the marine food web phytoplankton are at the base of the food web and are consumed by zooplankton amp krill which are preyed upon by larger and larger marine organisms including whales so it can be said that whale poop fuels the entire food web Humans amp plankton Edit Plankton have many direct and indirect effects on humans Around 70 of the oxygen in the atmosphere is produced in the oceans from phytoplankton performing photosynthesis meaning that the majority of the oxygen available for us and other organisms that respire aerobically is produced by plankton 70 Plankton also make up the base of the marine food web providing food for all the trophic levels above Recent studies have analyzed the marine food web to see if the system runs on a top down or bottom up approach Essentially this research is focused on understanding whether changes in the food web are driven by nutrients at the bottom of the food web or predators at the top The general conclusion is that the bottom up approach seemed to be more predictive of food web behavior 71 This indicates that plankton have more sway in determining the success of the primary consumer species that prey on them than do the secondary consumers that prey on the primary consumers In some cases plankton act as an intermediate host for deadly parasites in humans One such case is that of cholera an infection caused by several strains of Vibrio cholerae These species have been shown to have a symbiotic relationship with chitinous zooplankton species like copepods These bacteria benefit not only from the food provided by the chiton from the zooplankton but also from the protection from acidic environments Once the copepods have been ingested by a human host the chitinous exterior protects the bacteria from the stomach acids in the stomach and proceed to the intestines Once there the bacteria bind with the surface of the small intestine and the host will start developing symptoms including extreme diarrhea within five days 72 See also EditAeroplankton Gelatinous zooplankton Ichthyoplankton Nekton Paradox of the plankton Seston VeligerReferences Edit Lalli C Parsons T 1993 Biological Oceanography An Introduction Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 0 7506 3384 0 Smith David J July 2013 Aeroplankton and the Need for a Global Monitoring Network BioScience 63 7 515 516 doi 10 1525 bio 2013 63 7 3 S2CID 86371218 plankter American Heritage Dictionary Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company Archived from the original on 9 November 2018 Retrieved 9 November 2018 Dolan John November 2012 Microzooplankton the microscopic micro animals zoo of the plankton PDF Institut oceanographique Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 16 January 2014 Hansen Victor 1887 Uber die Bestimmung des Plankton s oder des im Meere treibenden Materials an Pflanzen und Thieren On the determination of the plankton or the material floating in the sea on plants and animals Funfter Bericht der Kommission zur Wissenschaftlichen Untersuchung der Deutschen Meere in German Berlin Germany Paul Parey 12 16 1 108 via Biodiversity Heritage Library Karleskint George Turner Richard Small James 2013 17 The Open Sea Introduction to Marine Biology 4th ed Brooks Cole pp 442 443 ISBN 978 1 133 36446 7 Agrawai Anju Gopnal Krishna 2013 Biomonitoring of Water and Waste Water Springer India p 34 ISBN 978 8 132 20864 8 Retrieved 2 April 2018 Plankter marine biology Encyclopaedia Britannica Emiliani C 1991 Planktic Planktonic Nektic Nektonic Benthic Benthonic Journal of Paleontology 65 2 329 doi 10 1017 S0022336000020576 JSTOR 1305769 S2CID 131283465 Wang G Wang X Liu X Li Q 2012 Diversity and biogeochemical function of planktonic fungi in the ocean In Raghukumar Chandralata ed Biology of Marine Fungi Springer Berlin Heidelberg pp 71 88 ISBN 978 3 642 23342 5 Wommack K E Colwell R R March 2000 Virioplankton viruses in aquatic ecosystems Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews 64 1 69 114 doi 10 1128 MMBR 64 1 69 114 2000 Plankton Resource Library National Geographic Retrieved 13 September 2019 Leles Suzana Goncalves November 2018 Modelling mixotrophic functional diversity and implications for ecosystem function Oxford Journals Journal of Plankton Research 40 6 627 642 doi 10 1093 plankt fby044 Hartmann M Grob C Tarran G A Martin A P Burkill P H Scanlan D J Zubkov M V 2012 Mixotrophic basis of Atlantic oligotrophic ecosystems Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 109 15 5756 5760 Bibcode 2012PNAS 109 5756H doi 10 1073 pnas 1118179109 PMC 3326507 PMID 22451938 Ward B A Follows M J 2016 Marine mixotrophy increases trophic transfer efficiency mean organism size and vertical carbon flux Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 113 11 2958 2963 Bibcode 2016PNAS 113 2958W doi 10 1073 pnas 1517118113 PMC 4801304 PMID 26831076 Mixing It Up in the Web of Life The Scientist Magazine Uncovered the mysterious killer triffids that dominate life in our oceans Catastrophic Darkness Astrobiology Magazine Archived from the original on 2015 09 26 Retrieved 2019 11 27 Chust G Vogt M Benedetti F Nakov T Villeger S Aubert A Vallina S M Righetti D Not F Biard T and Bittner L 2017 Mare incognitum A glimpse into future plankton diversity and ecology research Frontiers in Marine Science 4 68 doi 10 3389 fmars 2017 00068 Omori M Ikeda T 1992 Methods in Marine Zooplankton Ecology Malabar USA Krieger Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 89464 653 9 Dusenbery David B 2009 Living at micro scale the unexpected physics of being small Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 03116 6 Karsenti Eric Acinas Silvia G Bork Peer Bowler Chris De Vargas Colomban Raes Jeroen Sullivan Matthew Arendt Detlev Benzoni Francesca Claverie Jean Michel Follows Mick Gorsky Gaby Hingamp Pascal Iudicone Daniele Jaillon Olivier Kandels Lewis Stefanie Krzic Uros Not Fabrice Ogata Hiroyuki Pesant Stephane Reynaud 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Organization Geneva EOSrDRAFTr98 14 pp 207 299 Klassen R D amp Roberge P R 1999 Aerosol transport modeling as an aid to understanding atmospheric corrosivity patterns Materials amp Design 20 159 168 Moorthy K K Satheesh S K amp Krishna Murthy B V 1998 Characteristics ofspectral optical depths and size distributions of aerosols over tropical oceanic regions Journal of Atmospheric and Solar Terrestrial Physics 60 981 992 Chow J C Watson J G Green M C Lowenthal D H Bates B Oslund W amp Torre G 2000 Cross border transport and spatial variability of suspended particles in Mexicali and California s Imperial Valley Atmospheric Environment 34 1833 1843 Aller J Kuznetsova M Jahns C Kemp P 2005 The sea surface microlayer as a source of viral and bacterial enrichment in marine aerosols Journal of aerosol science Vol 36 pp 801 812 a b Marks R Kruczalak K Jankowska K amp Michalska M 2001 Bacteria and fungi in air over the GulfofGdansk and Baltic sea Journal of Aerosol Science 32 237 250 a b c Stubner E I Soreide J E 2016 01 27 Year round meroplankton dynamics in high Arctic Svalbard Journal of Plankton Research 38 3 522 536 doi 10 1093 plankt fbv124 Hays Graeme C Doyle Thomas K Houghton Jonathan D R 2018 A Paradigm Shift in the Trophic Importance of Jellyfish Trends in Ecology amp Evolution 33 11 874 884 doi 10 1016 j tree 2018 09 001 PMID 30245075 S2CID 52336522 Lalli C M amp Parsons T R 2001 Biological Oceanography Butterworth Heinemann Johnsen S 2000 Transparent Animals Scientific American 282 62 71 Nouvian C 2007 The Deep University of Chicago Press What are Ichthyoplankton Southwest Fisheries Science Center NOAA Modified 3 September 2007 Retrieved 22 July 2011 Allen Dr Larry G Horn Dr Michael H 15 February 2006 The Ecology of Marine Fishes California and Adjacent Waters pp 269 319 ISBN 9780520932470 Harvey Edmund Newton 1952 Bioluminescence Academic Press Anderson Genny Marine Plankton Marine Science Retrieved 2012 04 04 Talks Ted Zooplankton Marine Life Marine Invertebrates Archived from the original on 2017 12 07 Retrieved 2012 04 04 Plankton Britannica Retrieved 2020 06 13 Ershova E A Descoteaux R 2019 08 13 Diversity and Distribution of Meroplanktonic Larvae in the Pacific Arctic and Connectivity With Adult Benthic Invertebrate Communities Frontiers in Marine Science 6 doi 10 3389 fmars 2019 00490 S2CID 199638114 Sorokin Yuri I 12 March 2013 Coral Reef Ecology Springer Science amp Business Media p 96 ISBN 9783642800467 a b Chapman Michael J Margulis Lynn 2009 Kingdoms and Domains An Illustrated Guide to the Phyla of Life on Earth 4th ed ed Amsterdam Academic Press Elsevier pp 566 ISBN 978 0123736215 Simberloff Daniel Rejmanek Marcel eds 2011 Encyclopedia of biological invasions Berkeley University of California Press pp 736 ISBN 978 0520264212 Kennish Michael J ed 2004 Estuarine Research Monitoring and Resource Protection Boca Raton Fla CRC Press p 194 ISBN 978 0849319600 Archived from the original on 2013 01 20 Martin J H Fitzwater S E 1988 Iron deficiency limits phytoplankton growth in the Northeast Pacific Subarctic Nature 331 6154 341 343 Bibcode 1988Natur 331 341M doi 10 1038 331341a0 S2CID 4325562 Boyd P W et al 2000 A mesoscale phytoplankton bloom in the polar Southern Ocean stimulated by fertilization Nature 407 6805 695 702 Bibcode 2000Natur 407 695B doi 10 1038 35037500 PMID 11048709 S2CID 4368261 Falkowski Paul G 1994 The role of phytoplankton photosynthesis in global biogeochemical cycles PDF Photosynthesis Research 39 3 235 258 doi 10 1007 BF00014586 PMID 24311124 S2CID 12129871 permanent dead link a b James Alex Pitchford Jonathan W Brindley John 2003 02 01 The relationship between plankton blooms the hatching of fish larvae and recruitment Ecological Modelling 160 1 77 90 doi 10 1016 S0304 3800 02 00311 3 ISSN 0304 3800 Sarmento H Montoya JM Vazquez Dominguez E Vaque D Gasol JM 2010 Warming effects on marine microbial food web processes how far can we go when it comes to predictions Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B Biological Sciences 365 1549 2137 2149 doi 10 1098 rstb 2010 0045 PMC 2880134 PMID 20513721 Vazquez Dominguez E Vaque D Gasol JM 2007 Ocean warming enhances respiration and carbon demand of coastal microbial plankton Global Change Biology 13 7 1327 1334 Bibcode 2007GCBio 13 1327V doi 10 1111 j 1365 2486 2007 01377 x hdl 10261 15731 S2CID 8721854 Vazquez Dominguez E Vaque D Gasol JM 2012 Temperature effects on the heterotrophic bacteria heterotrophic nanoflagellates and microbial top predators of NW Mediterranean Aquatic Microbial Ecology 67 2 107 121 doi 10 3354 ame01583 Mazuecos E Aristegui J Vazquez Dominguez E Ortega Retuerta E Gasol JM Reche I 2012 Temperature control of microbial respiration and growth efficiency in the mesopelagic zone of the South Atlantic and Indian Oceans Deep Sea Research Part I Oceanographic Research Papers 95 2 131 138 doi 10 3354 ame01583 Petrou Katherina Nielsen Daniel 2019 08 27 Acid oceans are shrinking plankton fueling faster climate change phys org Retrieved 2019 09 07 Chisholm S W et al 2001 Dis crediting ocean fertilization Science 294 5541 309 310 doi 10 1126 science 1065349 PMID 11598285 S2CID 130687109 Aumont O Bopp L 2006 Globalizing results from ocean in situ iron fertilization studies Global Biogeochemical Cycles 20 2 GB2017 Bibcode 2006GBioC 20 2017A doi 10 1029 2005GB002591 a b Roach John June 7 2004 Source of Half Earth s Oxygen Gets Little Credit National Geographic News Retrieved 2016 04 04 Tappan Helen April 1968 Primary production isotopes extinctions and the atmosphere Palaeogeography Palaeoclimatology Palaeoecology 4 3 187 210 Bibcode 1968PPP 4 187T doi 10 1016 0031 0182 68 90047 3 Steinberg Deborah K Landry Michael R 2017 Zooplankton and the Ocean Carbon Cycle Annual Review of Marine Science 9 413 444 Bibcode 2017ARMS 9 413S doi 10 1146 annurev marine 010814 015924 PMID 27814033 Moller E F 2004 Sloppy feeding in marine copepods Prey size dependent production of dissolved organic carbon Journal of Plankton Research 27 27 35 doi 10 1093 plankt fbh147 Moller Eva Friis 2007 Production of dissolved organic carbon by sloppy feeding in the copepods Acartia tonsa Centropages typicus and Temora longicornis Limnology and Oceanography 52 1 79 84 Bibcode 2007LimOc 52 79M doi 10 4319 lo 2007 52 1 0079 Thor P Dam HG Rogers DR 2003 Fate of organic carbon released from decomposing copepod fecal pellets in relation to bacterial production and ectoenzymatic activity Aquatic Microbial Ecology 33 279 288 doi 10 3354 ame033279 Steinacher M et al 2010 Projected 21st century decrease in marine productivity a multi model analysis Biogeosciences 7 3 979 1005 Bibcode 2010BGeo 7 979S doi 10 5194 bg 7 979 2010 Michael Le Page March 2019 Animal with an anus that comes and goes could reveal how ours evolved New Scientist Medvinsky Alexander B Tikhonova Irene A Aliev Rubin R Li Bai Lian Lin Zhen Shan Malchow Horst 2001 07 26 Patchy environment as a factor of complex plankton dynamics Physical Review E 64 2 021915 Bibcode 2001PhRvE 64b1915M doi 10 1103 PhysRevE 64 021915 ISSN 1063 651X PMID 11497628 whale poop and phytoplankton fighting climate change IFAW Retrieved 2022 03 29 Sekerci Yadigar Petrovskii Sergei 2015 12 01 Mathematical Modelling of Plankton Oxygen Dynamics Under the Climate Change Bulletin of Mathematical Biology 77 12 2325 2353 doi 10 1007 s11538 015 0126 0 ISSN 1522 9602 PMID 26607949 S2CID 8637912 Frederiksen Morten Edwards Martin Richardson Anthony J Halliday Nicholas C Wanless Sarah November 2006 From plankton to top predators bottom up control of a marine food web across four trophic levels Journal of Animal Ecology 75 6 1259 1268 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2656 2006 01148 x ISSN 0021 8790 PMID 17032358 Lipp Erin K Huq Anwar Colwell Rita R October 2002 Effects of Global Climate on Infectious Disease the Cholera Model Clinical Microbiology Reviews 15 4 757 770 doi 10 1128 CMR 15 4 757 770 2002 ISSN 0893 8512 PMC 126864 PMID 12364378 Further reading EditKirby Richard R 2010 Ocean Drifters A Secret World Beneath the Waves Studio Cactus Ltd UK ISBN 978 1 904239 10 9 Dusenbery David B 2009 Living at Micro Scale The Unexpected Physics of Being Small Harvard University Press Cambridge Massachusetts ISBN 978 0 674 03116 6 Kiorboe Thomas 2008 A Mechanistic Approach to Plankton Ecology Princeton University Press Princeton N J ISBN 978 0 691 13422 2 Dolan J R Agatha S Coats D W Montagnes D J S Stocker D K eds 2013 Biology and Ecology of Tintinnid Ciliates Models for Marine Plankton Wiley Blackwell Oxford UK ISBN 978 0 470 67151 1 External links Edit Look up plankton in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Plankton Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Plankton Wikiquote has quotations related to Plankton Ocean Drifters Short film narrated by David Attenborough about the varied roles of plankton Plankton Chronicles Archived 2020 07 28 at the Wayback Machine Short documentary films and photos COPEPOD The Global Plankton Database Global coverage database of zooplankton biomass and abundance data Plankton Net Taxonomic database of images of plankton species Guide to the marine zooplankton of south eastern Australia Tasmanian Aquaculture and Fisheries Institute Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Science Continuous Plankton Recorder Survey Australian Continuous Plankton Recorder Project Integrated Marine Observing System Sea Drifters BBC Audio slideshow 1 Images of planktonic microorganisms Plankton planktic planktonic Essays on nomenclature Journal of Plankton Research dead link Scientific periodical devoted to plankton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plankton amp oldid 1136189772, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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