Abstract

Abstract. Linking lower and higher trophic levels requires special focus on the essential role played by mid-trophic levels, i.e., the zooplankton. One of the most relevant pieces of information regarding zooplankton in terms of flux of energy lies in its size structure. In this study, an extensive data set of size measurements is presented, covering parts of the western European continental shelf and slope, from the Galician coast to the Ushant front, during the springs from 2005 to 2012. Zooplankton size spectra were estimated using measurements carried out in situ with the Laser Optical Plankton Counter (LOPC) and with an image analysis of WP2 net samples (200 μm mesh size) performed following the ZooScan methodology. The LOPC counts and sizes particles within 100–2000 μm of spherical equivalent diameter (ESD), whereas the WP2/ZooScan allows for counting, sizing and identification of zooplankton from ~ 400 μm ESD. The difference between the LOPC (all particles) and the WP2/ZooScan (zooplankton only) was assumed to provide the size distribution of non-living particles, whose descriptors were related to a set of explanatory variables (including physical, biological and geographic descriptors). A statistical correction based on these explanatory variables was further applied to the LOPC size distribution in order to remove the non-living particles part, and therefore estimate the size distribution of zooplankton. This extensive data set provides relevant information about the zooplankton size distribution variability, productivity and trophic transfer efficiency in the pelagic ecosystem of the Bay of Biscay at a regional and interannual scale.

Highlights

  • Size of the zooplankton can play an essential role in pelagic ecosystems (Stemmann and Boss, 2012)

  • The difference between the Laser Optical Plankton Counter (LOPC) and the WP2/ZooScan was assumed to provide the size distribution of non-living particles, whose descriptors were related to a set of explanatory variables

  • The LOPC has been operating in the Bay of Biscay since 2005, during Spanish and French small pelagic surveys

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Summary

Introduction

Size of the zooplankton can play an essential role in pelagic ecosystems (Stemmann and Boss, 2012). The size-based approach becomes appropriate in trophodynamic observation or modeling studies linking lower and upper trophic levels (Daewel et al, 2014); i.e., looking at potential top-down control on zooplankton, or estimating food availability to fish (e.g., Bachiller and Irigoien, 2013). For the latter case, the size of prey field is a key model component, especially for fish larvae (e.g., anchovy and sardine, Poulet et al, 1996; Morote et al, 2010). Daewel et al (2008) proposed the sorting of modeled zooplankton biomass in size classes according to the average

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