Abstract

The distance demersal zooplankton (mobile, benthic organisms which periodically emerge from the benthos and move up into the water column) swim vertically above the bottom at night was measured quantitatively on a subtidal sand flat in the Gulf of California during July, 1979. Three patterns of migration were observed: (1) small-bodied animals, including copepods, ostracods and the amphipod Metaceradocus occidentalis, remained within 30 cm of the bottom except at full moon when a significantly higher proportion of these animals swam up at least 1 m into the water column, (2) syllid polychaetes swam up at least 2 m into the water column irregardless of the phase of the moon, and (3) large-bodied forms (animals >2 mm) swam throughout the water column but in gradually decreasing abundances nearer the surface. Since nocturnally foraging planktivorous fishes feed primarily on the large-bodied, readily visible animals, we had predicted that these large forms would remain near the relative safety of the benthos. However, the movement of the larger demersal zooplankton higher into the water column than the smaller, less visible forms, suggests that factors other than predation, possibly dispersal, may be major selective pressures governing the distance demersal zooplankton swim above the benthos.

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