Opportunistic vs selective feeding strategies of zooplankton under changing environmental conditions

Zooplankton
DNA metabarcoding
Food-web
Niche
Gradient
Authors
Affiliations

Baptiste Serandour

Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

Kinlan M.G. Jan

Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

Andreas Novotny

Institute for the Oceans and Fisheries, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada

Department of Ecology, Environment, and Plant Sciences, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

Monika Winder

Department of Ecology, Environment and Plant Sciences, Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

The plankton community consists of diverse interacting species. The estimation of species interactions in nature is challenging. There is limited knowledge on how plankton interactions are influenced by environmental conditions because of limited understanding of zooplankton feeding strategies and factors affecting trophic interactions. In this study, we used DNA-metabarcoding to investigate trophic interactions in mesozooplankton predators and the influence of prey availability on their feeding behavior. We found that mesozooplankton feeding strategies vary within species across an environmental gradient. Some species, such as Temora longicornis consistently used a selective strategy, while diets of Centropages hamatus and Acartia spp. varied between stations, showing a trophic plasticity with the prey community. We found a dominance of Synechococcales reads in Temora’s gut content and a high prey diversity for the cladoceran Evadne nordmanni. Our study shows the wide range of prey species that supports mesozooplankton community and helps to understand the spatial and temporal complexity of plankton species interactions and discriminate the selectivity ability of four zooplankton key species. Due to the central role of plankton in marine waters, a better comprehension of the spatiotemporal variability in species interactions helps to estimate fluxes to benthic and pelagic predators.

B Serandour, KMG Jan, A Novotny, M Winder. 2023. Opportunistic vs selective feeding strategies of zooplankton under changing environmental conditions. Journal of Plankton Research. 45 (2), 389-403. https://doi.org/10.1093/plankt/fbad007

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