Abstract

The mortality rate of female calanoid copepods Temora longicornis and Pseudocalanus elongatus was measured in relation to the concentration of different algae as a food source. Female copepods were fed either good-quality food (Rhodomonas sp.) or nutritionally poor food (Dunaliella sp., Amphidinium sp., Chrysochromulina polylepis and Synechococcus sp.) in high (>300 µg C l -1 ) or low (<100 µg C l -1 ) concentrations and survival was monitored. Both copepod species had low mor- tality rates (≤5% d -1 ) when fed with a high concentration of Rhodomonas sp. or Dunaliella sp., some- what higher rates with the same species at a low concentration (4 to 12% d -1 ), and highest rates with all the other algae (12 to 18% d -1 ), irrespective of the concentration. Hence, some poor-quality algae can supply part or all of the energy required for survival. Diet-specific differences were more pro- nounced at high than at low food concentrations, suggesting that at low concentrations, qualitative differences of the algal food source decrease. The clearest copepod-specific difference was observed in survival without food: probably due to internal energy reserves, P. elongatus survived in filtered water nearly twice as long as T. longicornis. We suggest that, in low food environments, food quantity and species-specific ability to resist starvation might be as important as food quality in determining the success of copepod populations.

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