Abstract

A study has been made of the plankton of the near-surface water layer (0 to 30 cm) of the eastern South Pacific Ocean in the region lying to the east of the meridian 90°W, between latitudes 5°N and 35°S. This region is influenced by the Peru Current: the current brings water from high latitudes, which results in a decrease in the number of species of the local fauna of copepods of the family Pontellidae, typical of tropical near-surface plankton. Some of the widely tropical and one bicentral species are absent or rare. Least affected by the Peru Current are the waters of equatorial structure in the northern part of the region. Here, 7 species of pontellids were recorded: the widely tropical Labidocera detruncata, Pontella tenuiremis, Pontellopsis regalis, the distant-neritic Pontella danae and Labidocera acuta, the bicentral Labidocera acutifrons, and the neritic Pontellopsis lubbockii. The dominant species among these are L. detruncata and L. acuta. To the west of the convergence, in the southern part of the region, live the southern central species Pontella valida and P. whiteleggei, with Pontellopsis regalis occurring occasionally. In these regions the copepod fauna is frequently dominated by pontellids. To the south of the boundary of the waters of equatorial structure, between the coast of South America and the line of convergence, lies a region most subjected to the effect of waters from high latitudes and of upwellings. It is inhabited by 2 pontellids only: Pontellopsis regalis and Labidocera acutifrons, but they too disappear close to the coast. In this particular region the copepods Calanus australis and Centropages brachiatus are common; they are found in a thicker water layer (0 to 200 m), and are often more abundant than the pontellids.

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