Abstract

Diel changes in fine-scale vertical distributions of three calanoid copepods Metridia pacifica, M. okhotensis and Pleuromamma scutullata in the subarctic waters of the western North Pacific were examined. Sampling was carried out in June and August 1983, at two stations in Oyashio water using a Longhurst-Hardy Plankton Recorder (LHPR). Sampling, down to about 1 000 m, was repeated four to five times at intervals of several hours. Vertical resolution was 5 to 40 m. Copepods were concentrated in two strata, the surface (0 to 60 m) and the mesopelagic (200 to 300 m) layers, throughout the day at both stations. Younger M. pacifica (C III and C IV) were dominant in both strata. Although most female C V and adult females demonstrated diel vertical migration at 20 to 30 m h-1, a significant number of females did not migrate upward but remained in the deep stratum at night. The same trend was evident in M. ohkotensis and P. scutullata. Foregut content observations indicated that feeding activities of the deep mode populations were as high as those of the surface mode, though food of deep individuals was different. Such a bimodal distribution may increase intraspecific diversity of copepod populations and is possibly why metridiid copepods dominate during late summer to winter in the relatively simple ecosystems of high latitudes.

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