Impacts of food web structure and oxygen concentrations on zooplankton diel vertical and horizontal migration

Résumé

Eutrophication and climate change have increased the frequency of hypoxic conditions in the
hypolimnia of lakes and reservoirs worldwide. Hypoxia can alter zooplankton migration from
vertical to horizontal because zooplankton require oxygen for respiration, and thus may be forced
to littoral refuge during the day. Fish communities can also affect zooplankton migration as well
as zooplankton community composition and size structure. However, the interaction of fish
communities and hypoxia on zooplankton migration has not been studied. We tested the
hypothesis that zooplankton exhibit more extensive (greater magnitude) vertical and horizontal
migration when piscivores are rare than when they are abundant, and also under hypoxic vs. oxic
hypolimnetic conditions. We sampled zooplankton and other environmental variables across six
consecutive days and nights during summer 2019 in a 16-lake experimental system, as part of
AQUACOSM. Half of the artificial lakes received a fertilization treatment with N and P
(eutrophic lakes with hypolimnetic hypoxia), and lakes were manipulated in order to enrich half
of them with European Perch (potentially piscivorous), and to reduce perch individuals in the
other lakes (all lakes had planktivorous Roach). Zooplankton were sampled in the epilimnion and
hypolimnion of the open water habitat and just outside and inside of the vegetated littoral zone.
We will report on the effects of fish communities and dissolved oxygen conditions on
zooplankton density and biomass in littoral vs. pelagic zones, and their diel vertical and
horizontal movements.


Auteurs, date et publication :

Auteurs J. P. Doubek , R. J. Chapina , S. Fiorini , S. K. Goldfarb , G. Lacroix , H. L. Wander , J. D. Stockwell

Date : 2025


Catégorie(s)

#⛔ No DOI found #CNRS #ENS #PLANAQUA