Zooplankton
Planktonic Organisms. Protists or metazoans (multicellular, with cells differentiated into tissues, organs, digestive cavity)
What do phytoplankton feed on
Phytoplankton, other zooplankton or detritus ; heterotrophic
Microzooplankton
<200μm
Macrozooplankton >2mm
Mesozooplankton
0.2-20mm
Herbivores
Feed exclusively on phytoplankton
Detrivores: feed on detritus
Omnivores: feed on phytoplankton and zooplankton
Carnivores
Feed primarily on other zooplankton
Holoplankton
Planktonic throughout life cycle
Meroplankton
Spend part of their life cycle as plankton before/after being nekton or benthos
Holoplankton- Planktonic Foraminifera
Holoplankton- Radiolaria
Holoplankton- salps (sea grape)
Holoplankton- Euphausiids- krill
Holoplankton- Crustaceans - Copepoda
Holoplankton- Crustacean- Ostracoda
Holoplankton- Gastropoda- gelatinous snails
Holoplankton- Marine planktonic worms
Meroplankton to nekton
Spend part of their life cycle as plankton before/after being nekton or benthos e.g. octopus larvae, larval flounder, squid larvae
Meroplankton from benthos - Jellyfish
Epipelagic zooplankton: 0-200m
Epipelagic zoo plankton
0-200m= euphotic and upper dysphotic light zones
Mesopeglagic zooplankton
Twilight (blue and green) to aphotic
Temperature change through thermocline
Decreases to <5 C
Pressure increases mesopelagic zone
1atm/10m
Adaptations of mesopelagic zooplankton
Bioluminescence: light produced and emitted by organisms
Oxidation of organic compounds
Predator defence
Camouflage