Project: Feeding and food limitation in copepod nauplii, the neglected life stage

Acronym/Short Name:food limitation in copepod nauplii
Project Duration:2009-09 - 2014-08
Geolocation:San Francisco Estuary

Description

This project will investigate feeding by copepod nauplius larvae, the most abundant metazoans in the sea. It will answer three questions: 1) How does food selection by adults and nauplii differ when they are fed multiple prey species in the laboratory? 2) How does food selection by adults and nauplii differ when they are feeding on natural prey assemblages? and, 3) How do growth, development, and survival differ between copepodites and nauplii when their growth is food limited? Comparative experiments and field-based measurements will contrast the food consumed, and the effects of food limitation, between nauplii and later life stages. This contrast will include attributes of food such as size, taxon, and motility, and will include experiments with cultured prey offered singly or in a mixture, and natural prey, and apply genetic techniques to determine prey consumption by a predatory copepod. Copepods will be collected from the San Francisco Estuary, with four species selected for experiments to span taxonomic groups, sizes, salinity ranges, and general feeding behavior. A variety of techniques will be applied to account for the inevitable biases and limitations of each; all but one have previously been applied in our laboratories. These will include laboratory feeding experiments using cultured prey individually and in mixtures, and experiments using natural prey. Consumption of prey in experimental bottles will be measured as chlorophyll concentration and through particle counts by microscopy and flow cytometry. Radioactively labeled prey will be used in short incubations to determine feeding on particular prey types. Samples from the field will be examined for gut fluorescence. Separate experiments will determine how nauplii and copepodites survive and grow at different concentrations of food. Investigations of feeding by a predatory copepod (Tortanus dextrilobatus) will use molecular techniques to identify mitochondrial and nuclear DNA from diverse suspected prey species. Specific primers will be developed for common zooplankton species consumed by T. dextrilobatus in the laboratory. General primers and screening protocols developed here will be useful for identifying food web interactions in other estuarine communities.

Copepod nauplii are important both in their diverse trophic roles in ocean foodwebs and in the population dynamics of copepods. Nauplii have a completely different feeding apparatus from later stages, and the first feeding stage can be very sensitive to starvation, making these life stages critical to population dynamics. Yet extant copepod population models treat nauplii as miniature adults. This work will provide valuable input to the growing efforts at modeling ocean ecosystems. 

Further details from final report (pdf)


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Identification of copepod gut contents analyzed at San Francisco State University in 2013 (Food Limitation in Copepod nauplii project)2021-06-10Final no updates expected
Field collection data for taxa detected in Copepod nauplii guts analyzed at San Francisco State University in 2013 (Food Limitation in Copepod nauplii project)2015-02-11Final no updates expected
Experimental results describing Pseudodiaptomus marinus gut area measured in pixels from San Francisco State University in 20132015-01-15Final no updates expected
Laboratory results on Copepod nauplii and adult gut epifluorescence in samples collected from the San Francisco estuary in 20132015-01-15Final no updates expected
Taxa detected in field caught nauplii guts analyzed at San Francisco State University in 2013 (Food Limitation in Copepod nauplii project)2015-01-15Final no updates expected
Experimental results describing the minimum time for copepod gut fluorescence by plate reader method analyzed at San Francisco State University during 20132015-01-15Final no updates expected
Laboratory results on Copepod gut fullness index measured in pixels from San Francisco State University in 2013 (Food Limitation in Copepod nauplii project)2015-01-15Final no updates expected
Estimated feeding rates of adult and nauplius copepod species on three phytoplankton species from the San Francisco estuary in 20132015-01-15Final no updates expected
GenBank BLAST results of copepod nauplii gut contents analyzed at San Francisco State University in 2013 (Food Limitation in Copepod nauplii project)2015-01-15Final no updates expected
Experimental results describing Copepod fed phytoplankton mixtures that were analyzed at San Francisco State University in 20132015-01-15Preliminary and in progress
Laboratory results on Copepod gut fullness using two tintinnid diets from San Francisco State University in 2013 (Food Limitation in Copepod nauplii project)2015-01-15Final no updates expected
Experimental results describing if sonication is needed for chlorophyll extraction by copepods in the San Francisco estuary conducted during 20132015-01-15Final no updates expected
Experimental results describing Pseudodiaptomus marinus gut minimum fluorescence thresholds that were analyzed at San Francisco State University in 20132015-01-15Final no updates expected
Experimental results describing copepod gut evacuation time from species collected in the San Francisco estuary during 20132015-01-15Final no updates expected

People

Principal Investigator: William Kimmerer
San Francisco State University (SFSU)

Co-Principal Investigator: Cynthia Cohen
San Francisco State University (SFSU)

Contact: William Kimmerer
San Francisco State University (SFSU)


Data Management Plan

DMP_OCE-0920975_Kimmerer.pdf (54.35 KB)
02/09/2025