Abstract

Summary1. Sloppy and inefficient feeding by zooplankton is generally thought to make a major contribution to the regeneration of the dissolved organic carbon (DOC) pool in aquatic environments. In this study, we tested experimentally the regeneration of DOC by a freshwater zooplankter feeding on two species of phytoplankton at different food concentrations and C : P ratios. We separated the DOC production because of inefficient feeding (pre‐ingestive regeneration) and zooplankton excretion and faeces release (postdigestive regeneration).2. Within a brief incubation period (10 min), DOC production in the presence of Daphnia was not significantly different from that in the control treatment without grazers. During a longer incubation period (4 h), the amounts of radiocarbon retained in the algal cells per se were constant or were not different from those in the control treatments. These experimental results strongly suggest that inefficient feeding did not contribute significantly to DOC production in the grazer–prey system.3. During the 4‐h incubation, calculations of the DOC per ingestion rate (i.e. DOC produced by Daphnia alone) showed that food concentration and algal species did not affect the relative DOC production, but there was considerable difference at different algal C : P ratios and grazer densities. We found that direct excretion of DOC by Daphnia occurred rapidly following food digestion and accounted for >65% of the total DOC production. Maximum DOC leakage from Daphnia faeces contributed less to DOC production than the grazer excretion, except under P‐limited conditions.4. This study highlights the dominant role of postingestive process, especially the direct excretion by zooplankton, in DOC production in a grazer–prey system.

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