Abstract

An intensive field study of three depth zones in 1980 revealed different seasonal patterns of growth in the deposit-feedingPontoporeia affinis Lindstrom andP. femorata Kroyer (Crustacea, Amphipoda) in the northern Baltic Sea, SW coast of Finland. The study areas were situated in the outer archipelago at depths of 21 to 25 m and 26 to 30 m and in the sea zone at 46 m. InP. affinis growth rates decreased with increasing depth, but the same seasonal pattern was evident at all depths: growth began in spring, increased to a maximum in early or midsummer, and decreased again or ceased altogether by autumn. In the archipelago the 1 + age group attained its maximum growth rate in May–June and the 0 + age group clearly later, in June–July. InP. femorata the growth rates of all age groups were more even, having only slight peaks in summer and autumn. The seasonal variation in growth ofPontoporeia spp. was not directly dependent on sedimentation of the spring phytoplankton bloom, but was more closely connected with seasonality of temperature and total benthic metabolism. Because estimates of annual food consumption byPontoporeia spp. exceeded bacterial and meiofaunal production, these species must have derived the majority of their energy demands from dead organic detritus. BothPontoporeia species are probably strictly food-limited in the area. The cessation of growth seemed to coincide with the approach of a plateau of total biomass, suggesting food competition. Different timing of growth between the age groups ofP. affinis suggests differences in sources or utilization of food; differences betweenP. affinis adP. femorata may indicate interspecific competition or different food.

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