Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-dfsvx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T09:43:50.846Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Variability in fatty acids of two marine copepods upon changing food supply in the coastal upwelling zone off Chile: importance of the picoplankton and nanoplankton fractions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 December 2009

Ruben Escribano*
Affiliation:
Center for Oceanographic Research in the eastern south Pacific (COPAS), Marine Biology Station at Dichato, Universidad de Concepción, PO BOX 42, Dichato, Chile Department of Oceanography, Marine Biology Station at Dichato, Universidad de Concepción, PO BOX 42, Dichato, Chile
Claudia S. Pérez
Affiliation:
Center for Oceanographic Research in the eastern south Pacific (COPAS), Marine Biology Station at Dichato, Universidad de Concepción, PO BOX 42, Dichato, Chile
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: R. Escribano, Center for Oceanographic Research in the eastern south Pacific (COPAS), Marine Biology Station at Dichato, Universidad de Concepción, PO BOX 42, DichatoChile email: rescribano@udec.cl

Abstract

Fatty acids composition of two marine copepods, Acartia tonsa and Centropages brachiatus, and lipid profiles of natural food assemblages were studied during the austral summer 2006 at three upwelling sites in the coastal upwelling zone off Chile, along with oceanographic conditions. Fatty acids of food supply were assessed for the picoplankton, nanoplankton and microplankton size fractions. There were marked differences in upwelling conditions among locations, as well as in their food supply in terms of quantity and quality. Differences in fatty acid composition were also found, both among food assemblages and between copepod species. Essential polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA; linoleic acid) and monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA; oleic acid) dominated the picoplankton and nanoplankton size fractions of food, and they were highly represented in both species of copepods, indicating these size fractions were the major contributors to their diet. These fatty acids can thus be considered as useful trophic markers for copepods. Variation in lipid profiles between species depended on sampling sites, whereas differences in lipid composition among sampling sites were attributed to distinct upwelling conditions, which drive the changes in food quality, such that trophic response is highly dependent on food offer. Variation in fatty acids compositions of copepods may thus act as an indicator of upwelling variability. Our findings suggest that lipid transfer from primary producers to primary consumers can have a crucial role for carbon cycling in the marine food web, and that picoplankton and nanoplankton fractions are the key items of copepod diet in this upwelling system.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Ackman, R. and Tocher, C. (1968) Marine phytoplankter fatty acids. Journal of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada 25, 16031620.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Anabalón, V., Morales, C.E., Escribano, R. and Varas, M.A. (2007) The contribution of nano- and micro-planktonic assemblages in the surface layer (0–30) under different hydrographic conditions in the upwelling area off Concepción, central Chile. Progress in Oceanography 75, 396414.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andersen, P. and Fenchel, T. (1985) Bacterivory by microheterotrophic flagellates in seawater samples. Limnology and Oceanography 30, 198202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Auel, H., Harjes, M., de Rocha, R., Stübing, S. and Hagen, W. (2002) Lipid biomarkers indicate different ecological niches and trophic relationships of the Artic hyperiid amphipods. Themisto abyssorum and T. libellulua. Polar Biology 25, 374383.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Azam, F., Fenchel, T., Field, J., Gray, J., Meyer-Reil, L. and Thingstad, F. (1983) The ecological role of water-column microbes in the sea. Marine Ecology Progress Series 10, 257263.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berggreen, B., Hansen, B. and Kiørboe, T. (1988) Food size spectra, ingestion and growth of the copepod Acartia tonsa during development: implications for determination of copepod production. Marine Biology 99, 341352.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Böttjer, D. and Morales, C.E. (2005) Microzooplankton grazing in a coastal embayment off Concepción, Chile, (~36°S) during non-upwelling conditions. Journal of Plankton Research 27, 383391.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Böttjer, D. and Morales, C. (2007) Nanoplanktonic assemblages in the upwelling area off Concepción (~36°S). central Chile: abundance, biomass, and grazing potential during the annual cycle. Progress in Oceanography 75, 415434.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowden, K.F. (1983) Physical oceanography of coastal waters. New York: Ellis Horwood Series on Marine Science, John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Calbet, A. and Saiz, E. (2005) The ciliate–copepod link in marine ecosystems. Aquatic Microbial Ecology 38, 157167.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cantellops, D., Reid, A., Eitenmiller, R. and Long, A. (1999) Determination of lipids in infant formula powder by direct extraction methylation of lipids and fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) analysis by gas chromatography. Journal of AOAC International 82, 11281139.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cripps, G.C. and Hill, H.J. (1998) Changes in lipid composition of copepods and Ephausia superba associateds with diet and environmental conditions in the marginal ice zone, Bellingshausen Sea, Antarctica. Deep-Sea Research Part I 45, 13571381.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cuevas, L.A. and Morales, C.E. (2006) Nano-heterotroph grazing on bacteria and cyanobacteria in oxic and suboxic waters in coastal upwelling areas off northern Chile. Journal of Plankton Research 28, 385397.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cushing, D.H. (1990) Plankton production and year class strength in fish populations: an update of the match/mismatch hypothesis. Advances in Marine Biology 26, 250294.Google Scholar
Desvilettes, C.H., Bourdier, G., Breton, J.C. and Combrouze, Ph. (1994) Fatty acid as organic markers for the study of trophic relationships in littoral cladoceran communities. Journal of Plankton Research 16, 643659.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Desvilettes, CH., Bourdier, G., Amblard, C.H. and Barth, B. (1997) Use of fatty acids for the assessment of zooplankton grazing on bacteria, protozoans and microalgae. Freshwater Biology 38, 629637.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ederington, C.M., McManus, G.B. and Harvey, H.R. (1995) Trophic transfer of fatty acids, sterols and triterpenoid alcohol between bacteria, a ciliate, and the copepod Acartia tonsa. Limnology and Oceanography 40, 860867.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Escribano, R. and McLaren, I.A. (1999) Production of Calanus chilensis in the upwelling area of Antofagasta, northern Chile. Marine Ecology Progress Series 177, 147156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Escribano, R. and Hidalgo, P. (2000) Spatial distribution of copepods in the north of the Humboldt Current region off Chile during coastal upwelling. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 80, 283290.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Escribano, R., Daneri, D., Farías, L., Gallardo, V.A., González, H.E., Gutierrez, D., Lange, C., Morales, C.E., Pizarro, O., Ulloa, O. and Braun, M. (2004) Biological and chemical consequences of the 1997–98 El Niño in the Chilean coastal upwelling system: a synthesis. Deep-Sea Research Part II 51/20–21, 23892411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Escribano, R. and Schneider, G. (2007) The structure and functioning of the coastal upwelling system off central/southern Chile. Progress in Oceanography 75, 343347.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Escribano, R., Hidalgo, P., González, H., Giesecke, R., Riquelme-Bugueño, R. and Manríquez, K. (2007) Seasonal and inter-annual variation of mesozooplankton in the coastal upwelling zone off central-southern Chile. Progress in Oceanography 75, 396414.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Falk-Petersen, S., Sargent, J.R. and Tande, K.S. (1987) Lipid composition of zooplankton in relation to the sub-arctic food web. Polar Biology 8, 115120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Falk-Petersen, S., Hagen, W., Kattner, G., Clarke, A. and Sargent, J. (2000) Lipids, trophic relationships, and biodiversity in Arctic and Antarctic krill. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 57, 178191.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fraser, A.J., Sargent, J.R. and Gambic, J.C. (1989) Lipid class and fatty acid composition of Calanus finmarchicus (Gunnerus), Pseudocalanus sp. and Temora longicornis Müller from a nutrient-enriched seawater enclosure. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 130, 8192.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gifford, D.J. (1993) Consumption of protozoa by copepod feeding on natural microplankton assemblages. In Kemp, P.F., Sherr, B.F., Sherr, E.B. and Cole, J.J. (eds) Handbook of methods in aquatic microbial ecology. London: Lewis Publishers, pp. 723737.Google Scholar
González, H.E., Pagés, F., Sobarzo, M. and Escribano, R. (2002) Effects of the 1997/98 El Niño on the oceanographic conditions and zooplankton community structure in the coastal upwelling system off northern Chile. Investigaciones Marinas Valparaiso, Chile 30, 112114.Google Scholar
Graeve, M., Kattner, G. and Hagen, W. (1994) Diet-induced changes in the fatty acid composition of the Arctic herbivorous copepods: experimental evidence of trophic markers. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 182, 97110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herrera, L. and Escribano, R. (2006) Factors structuring the phytoplankton community in the upwelling site off El Loa River in northern Chile. Journal of Marine Systems 61, 1338.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hidalgo, P. and Escribano, R. (2001) Succession of pelagic–copepod species during the period 1996/1998 in northern Chile: the influence of the 1997–98 El Niño. Hydrobiologia 453, 153160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hidalgo, P. and Escribano, R. (2007) Coupling of cycles of the copepods Calanus chilensis and Centropages brachiatus to upwelling induced variability in the central-southern region of Chile. Progress in Oceanography 75, 501517.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Iriarte, J.L. and González, H.E. (2004) Phytoplankton size structure during and after the 1997/98 El Niño in a coastal upwelling area of the northern Humboldt Current System. Marine Ecology Progress Series 269, 8390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kattner, G., Hirche, H. and Krause, M. (1989) Spatial variability in lipid composition of calanoid copepods from Fram Strait, The Arctic. Marine Biology 102, 473480.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klein Breteler, W.C.M., Schogt, N., Baas, M., Schouten, S. and Kraay, G.W. (1999) Trophic upgrading of food quality by protozoans enhancing copepod growth: role of essential lipids. Marine Biology 135, 191198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klein Breteler, W.C.M., Schogt, N. and Rampen, S. (2005) Effect of diatom nutrient limitation on copepod development: role of essential lipids. Marine Ecology Progress Series 291, 125133.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lee, R., Nevenzel, J.C. and Paffenhöfer, G.A. (1971) Importance of wax esters and other lipids in the marine food chain: phytoplankton and copepods. Marine Biology 9, 99108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mann, K.H. and Lazier, J.R.N. (1991) Dynamics of marine ecosystems. Oxford: Blackwell Scientific Publications, Inc., pp. 563.Google Scholar
Marín, V., Rodriguez, L., Vallejo, L., Fuenteseca, J. and Oyarce, E. (1993) Efectos de la surgencia costera sobre la productividad primaria primaveral de Bahía Mejillones del Sur (Antofagasta, Chile). Revista Chilena de Historia Natural 66, 479491.Google Scholar
Montero, P., Daneri, G., Cuevas, L.A., González, H.E., Jacob, B., Lizarraga, L. and Menschel, E. (2007) Productivity cycles in the coastal upwelling area off Concepción: the importance of diatoms and bacterioplankton in the organic carbón flux. Progress in Oceanography 75, 518530.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Napolitano, G., Pollero, R., Gayoso, A., Macdonald, B. and Thompson, R. (1997) Fatty acid as trophic markers of phytoplankton blooms in the bahia Blanca estuary (Buenos Aires, Argentina) and in Trinity Bay (Newfoundland, Canada). Biochemical Systematics and Ecology 25, 739755.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nelson, M.M., Mooney, B.D., Nichols, P.D. and Phleger, C.F. (2001) Lipids of Antarctic Ocean amphipods: food chain interactions and the occurrence of novel biomarkers. Marine Chemistry 73, 5364.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Parsons, T.R., Maita, Y. and Lalli, C.M. (1984) A manual of chemical and biological methods for seawater analysis. Oxford: Pergamon Press.Google Scholar
Porter, K.G. and Feig, Y.S. (1980) The use of DAPI for identifying and counting of aquatic microflora. Limnology and Oceanography 25, 943948.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roman, M.R. (1984) Utilization of detritus by copepod, Acartia tonsa. Limnology and Oceanography 5, 949959.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sargent, J., Parkes, R., Mueller-Harvey, I. and Henderson, R. (1988) Lipid biomarkers in marine ecology. In Sleigh, M.A. (ed.) Microbes in the sea. Chichester: Ellis Horwood, pp. 119138.Google Scholar
Sargent, J.R., Bell, M.V. and Henderson, R.J. (1995) Protists as sources of (n-3) polysaturated fatty acids for vertebrate development. In Protistological Actualities. Proceedings of the 2nd European Congress on Protistology, pp. 5464.Google Scholar
Scott, C.L., Falk-Petersen, S., Sargent, J.K., Hop, H., Lonne, O.J. and Poltermann, M. (1999) Lipids and trophic interactions of ice fauna and pelagic zooplankton in the marginal ice zone of the Barents Sea. Polar Biology 21, 6570.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sobarzo, M., Bravo, L., Donoso, D., Garcés-Vargas, J. and Schneider, W. (2007) Coastal upwelling and seasonal cycles that influence on the water column on the continental shelf off Central Chile. Progress in Oceanography 75, 363382.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stevens, C., Deibel, D. and Parrish, C. (2004) Copepod omnivory in the North Water Polynya (Baffin Bay) during autumn: spatial patterns in lipid composition. Deep-Sea Research. I 51, 16371658.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strub, P.T., Mesias, J.M., Montecino, V., Rutlland, J. and Salinas, S. (1998) Coastal ocean circulation off Western South America. In Robinson, A.R. and Brink, K.H. (eds) The sea. Volume 11. New York: John Wiley & Sons, pp. 273313.Google Scholar
Thomas, A.C., Blanco, J.L., Carr, M.E., Strub, P.T. and Osses, J. (2001) Satellite-measured chlorophyll and temperature variability off northern Chile during the 1996–98 La Niña and El Niño. Journal of Geophysical Research 106, 899915.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ulloa, O., Escribano, R., Hormazabal, S., Quiñones, R.A., Ramos, M. and González, R.R. (2001) Evolution and biological effects of the 1997–98 El Niño in northern Chile. Geophysical Research Letters 28, 15911594.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Utermöhl, H.Zur Vervollkommnung der quantitautiven Phytoplankton-Methodik. Mitteilungen Internationale Vereinigung-Theoretishe und Angewandte für Limnologie 9, 138.Google Scholar
Vargas, C., Escribano, R. and Poulet, S. (2006) Phytoplankton food quality determines time windows for successful zooplankton reproductive pulses. Ecology 87, 29922999.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vargas, C., Martínez, R., Cuevas, L.A., Pavez, M., Cartes, C., González, H.E., Escribano, R. and Daneri, G. (2007) Interplay among microbial, omnivorous, and gelatinous metazoan food webs in a highly productive coastal upwelling area. Limnology and Oceanography 52, 14951510.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Viso, A. and Marty, J. (1993) Fatty acids from 28 marine microalgae. Phytochemistry 34, 15211533.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Volkman, J., Jeffrey, S., Nichols, P., Rogers, G. and Garland, C. (1989) Fatty acid and lipid composition of species of microalgae used in mariculture. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 128, 219240.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weers, P., Siewertsen, K. and Gulati, R. (1997) Is the fatty acid composition of Daphnia galeata determined by the fatty acid composition of the ingested diet? Freshwater Biology 38, 731737.CrossRefGoogle Scholar