Project: Collaborative Research: Quantifying trophic roles and food web ecology of salp blooms of the Chatham Rise

Acronym/Short Name:Salp Food Web Ecology
Project Duration:2018-05 -2023-04
Geolocation:East of New Zealand, Chatham Rise area

Description

NSF Award Abstract:
Salps are unique open-ocean animals that range in size from a few millimeters to greater than twenty centimeters, have a gelatinous (jelly-like) body, and can form long chains of many connected individuals. These oceanic organisms act as oceanic vacuum cleaners, having incredibly high feeding rates on phytoplankton and, unusual for consumers of their size, smaller bacteria-sized prey. This rapid feeding and the salps' tendency to form dense blooms, allows them move substantial amounts of prey carbon from the surface into the deep ocean, leading to carbon dioxide removal from the atmosphere. However, salps are often considered a trophic dead-end, rather than a link, in the food web due to the assumption that they themselves are not consumed, since their gelatinous bodies are less nutritious than co-occurring crustacean prey. Along with this, salp populations are hypothesized to be increasing due to climate change. This proposal addresses these questions: 1) Do salps compete primarily with crustaceans (as in the prevailing paradigm) or are they competitors of single-celled protists, which are the dominant grazers of small phytoplankton? 2) Do salp blooms increase the efficiency of food-web pathways from tiny phytoplankton to fisheries production in nutrient-poor ocean regions?

This project will support the interdisciplinary education of a graduate student who will learn modeling and laboratory techniques in the fields of biological and chemical oceanography and stimulate international collaborations between scientists in the United States and New Zealand. Additionally, several Education and Outreach initiatives are planned, including development of a week-long immersive high school class in biological oceanography, and education modules that will serve the "scientists-in-the schools" program in Tallahassee, FL.

It is commonly assumed that salps are a trophic sink. However, this idea was developed before the discovery that protists (rather than crustaceans) are the dominant grazers in the open ocean and was biased by the difficulty of recognizing gelatinous salps in fish guts. More recent studies show that salps are found in guts of a diverse group of fish and seabirds and are a readily available prey source when crustacean abundance is low. This proposal seeks to quantify food web flows through contrasting salp-dominated and salp-absent water parcels near the Chatham Rise off western New Zealand where salp blooms are a predictable phenomenon. The proposal will leverage previously obtained data on salp abundance, bulk grazing impact, and biogeochemical significance during Lagrangian experiments conducted by New Zealand-based collaborators. The proposal will determine 1) taxon- and size-specific phytoplankton growth rate measurements, 2) taxon- and size-specific protozoan and salp grazing rate measurements, 3) compound specific isotopic analysis of the amino acids of mesozooplankton to quantify the trophic position of salps, hyperiid amphipods, and other crustaceans, 4) sediment traps to quantify zooplankton carcass sinking rates, and 5) linear inverse ecosystem modeling syntheses. Secondary production and trophic flows from this well-constrained ecosystem model will be compared to crustacean-dominated and microbial loop-dominated ecosystems in similarly characterized regions (California Current, Costa Rica Dome, and Gulf of Mexico).

This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.


DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Plankton size spectra compiled from projects CCE LTER, HOT, CRD FluZIE, BLOOFINZ-GoM, and SalpPOOP in the California Current Ecosystem, North Pacific subtropical gyre, Costa Rica Dome, Gulf of Mexico, and Southern Ocean subtropical front from 2004-20182024-10-17Final no updates expected
Salps & Hyperiid Amphipods CSIA-AA2023-09-15Data not available
Bulk stable isotopes (d13C, d15N) of size-fractionated zooplankton collected near the Chatham Rise on the R/V Tangaroa SalpPOOP (TAN1810) cruise in Oct. and Nov. of 20182023-09-15Data not available
Compound specific isotopic analysis (15N) of the amino acids of size-fractionated zooplankton collected near the Chatham Rise on the R/V Tangaroa SalpPOOP (TAN1810) cruise in Oct. and Nov. of 20182023-09-15Data not available
Salp & Hyperiid Amphipod bulk isotopes2023-09-15Data not available
Size Fractionated Chlorophyll Measurements from R/V Tangaroa TAN1810 in the Chatham Rise (Subtropical and Sub-Antarctic waters off of New Zealand) from October to November 2018 (Salp Food Web Ecology project)2023-08-01Preliminary and in progress
Reduced Epifluorescence Microscopy Water Column Samples from R/V Tangaroa TAN1810 in the Chatham Rise (Subtropical and Sub-Antarctic waters off of New Zealand) from October to November 2018 (Salp Food Web Ecology project)2023-07-26Preliminary and in progress
Epifluorescence Microscopy Water Column Samples from R/V Tangaroa TAN1810 in the Chatham Rise (Subtropical and Sub-Antarctic waters off of New Zealand) from October to November 2018 (Salp Food Web Ecology project)2023-07-24Preliminary and in progress
Size-binned particle abundance and biovolume from FlowCam runs on the "SalpPOOP" cruise on R/V Tangaroa during October and November 20182023-05-11Final no updates expected
Particle size, volume, and converted biomass from the gut contents of salps imaged via scanning electron microscopy on the "SalpPOOP" cruise on R/V Tangaroa during October and November 20182023-05-10Final no updates expected
Particle size, volume, and converted biomass from FlowCam runs on the "SalpPOOP" cruise on R/V Tangaroa during October and November 20182023-05-09Final no updates expected
Size-binned particle abundance and biovolume of the gut contents of salps imaged via scanning electron microscopy on the "SalpPOOP" cruise on R/V Tangaroa during October and November 20182023-05-08Final no updates expected
Thorium-234 data from SalpPOOP cruise on the R/V Tangaroa to the Chatham Rise (subtropical and subantarctic waters) in October and November 20182022-12-16Final no updates expected
Eukaryotic phytoplankton flow cytometric results from salp grazing incubations conducted on R/V Tangaroa cruise TAN1810 during Oct-Nov 20182021-04-08Final no updates expected
Sediment trap carbon, nitrogen, and isotope flux from the "SalpPOOP" cruise on R/V Tangaroa during October and November 20182020-07-08Final no updates expected
Carbon, nitrogen, d13C, and d15N water column data from the "SalpPOOP" cruise on R/V Tangaroa during October and November 20182020-07-07Final no updates expected
Sediment trap-derived flux of salp fecal pellets (carbon mass flux) from the "SalpPOOP" cruise on R/V Tangaroa during October and November 20182020-06-02Final no updates expected
Sediment trap chlorophyll a and phaeopigment flux from the "SalpPOOP" cruise on R/V Tangaroa during October and November 20182020-06-02Final no updates expected
Microbial abundance of phytoplankton and bacteria from RV/Tangaroa cruise TAN1810SALP to Chatham Rise vicinity, east of New Zealand, Oct - Nov. 20182020-04-20Final no updates expected

People

Principal Investigator: Karen E. Selph
University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa (SOEST)

Principal Investigator: Michael R. Stukel
Florida State University (FSU)

Contact: Michael R. Stukel
Florida State University (FSU)


Data Management Plan

DMP_Stukel_Selph_OCE-1756465_1756610.pdf (84.65 KB)
02/09/2025