Abstract
Demersal zooplankton reside in or near the reef substrata and usually migrate into the water column at night. There is no single pulse of migratory activity. The zooplankton rise at variable rates throughout the night, with a peak activity usually during the second hour after sunset. This temporal pattern is a reflection of the behavior of the dominant (80–90% of night samples) cyclopoid, Oithona colcarva Bowman. Not all zooplankton taxa exhibit the same diel migratory patterns. Harpacticoids, another Oithona sp., copepod nauplii, barnacle nauplii, and appendicularians are most abundant during the day. Isopods show a peak of activity also during the second hour after sunset while polychaetes are most abundant during the first hour. The behavior of the other groups studied (the cyclopoid Corycaeus sp., other cyclopoids, ostracods, amphipods, tanaids, decapods, mysids, and chaetognaths) was less easily defined. The migration of many species in a pulse during the period of least planktivore activity and migration during the day of small species and juvenile members of larger species suggests that visual predators have an important influence on the migratory behavior of reef zooplankton.
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More From: Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology
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