The proportion of caloric energy associated with each of the macrozooplankton populations at two stations in upper Frobisher Bay was determined at intervals during three consecutive open-water seasons. In the upper 50 m of the water column three species (the ctenophore Mertensia ovum, the chaetognath Sagitta elegans, and the hyperiid amphipod Parathemisto libellula) consistently accounted for 90% of the caloric content of the macrozooplankton community. The ctenophore dominated the samples and accounted for 60-95% of the total calories. In deeper water (> 70m) euphausiids, primarily Thysanoessa inermis, accounted for most of the macrozooplankton calories. Ctenophores do not appear to be major prey of arctic marine vertebrates. Thus, in Frobisher Bay surface waters a large proportion of the available energy ends up in an apparent trophic dead end of low specific caloricity.
CITATION STYLE
Percy, J. A., & Fife, F. J. (1985). Energy Distribution in an Arctic Coastal Macrozooplankton Community. ARCTIC, 38(1). https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic2105
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