Title
Zooplankton research off Peru: A review
Date Issued
01 October 2008
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Elsevier
Abstract
A review of zooplankton studies conducted in Peruvian marine waters is given. After a short history of the development of zooplankton research off Peru, we review zooplankton methodology, taxonomy, biodiversity, spatial distribution, seasonal and interannual variability, trophodynamics, secondary production, and modelling. We review studies on several micro-, meso-, macro-, and meroplankton groups, and give a species list from both published and unpublished reports. Three regional zooplankton groups have been identified: (1) a continental shelf group dominated by Acartia tonsa and Centropages brachiatus; (2) a continental slope group characterized by siphonophores, bivalves, foraminifera and radiolaria; (3) and a species-rich oceanic group. The highest zooplankton abundances and biomasses were often found between 4-6°S and 14-16°S, where continental shelves are narrow. Species composition changes with distance from the shore. Species composition and biomass also vary strongly on short time scales due to advection, peaks of larval production, trophic interactions, and community succession. The relation of zooplankton to climatic variability (ENSO and multi-decadal) and fish stocks is discussed in the context of ecological regime shifts. An intermediate upwelling hypothesis is proposed, based on the negative effects of low upwelling intensity in summer or extremely strong and enduring winter upwelling on zooplankton abundance off Peru. According to this hypothesis, intermediate upwelling creates an optimal environmental window for zooplankton communities. Finally, we highlight important knowledge gaps that warrant attention in future. © 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Start page
238
End page
255
Volume
79
Issue
April 2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biología marina, Biología de agua dulce, Limnología
Oceanografía, Hidrología, Recursos hídricos
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-56749180711
Source
Progress in Oceanography
ISSN of the container
00796611
Sponsor(s)
World Bank Group -WBG
European Commission - EC
From the 90s to the present (2007), IMARPE zooplankton scientists have published papers on interaction between zooplankton and the environment (particularly El Niño; Aronés and Ayón, 2002; Castillo et al., 2005 ), species composition and abundance ( Abanto, 2001 ), diel vertical migration ( Escudero, 2003 ), and zooplankton time series relative to fish stock ( Alheit and Niquen, 2004 ) or hydrographic variability ( Gutiérrez et al., 2005; Ayón et al., 2004; Aronés et al., in press; Ayón et al., 2008 ). This work was supported by the European Community VECEP Program (1993–1999), which supported several fisheries surveys, and World Bank loans to purchase laboratory equipment (1999). In 1998 the research vessel “José Olaya Balandra” was donated by the Japanese government including sampling gear and laboratory equipment. CICESE (Mexico) provided funds from 2004 to 2005 for the analysis of zooplankton time series. In 2005, the multi-country project CENSOR was launched in Peru, funded by the European Union (“Climate variability and El Niño Southern Oscillation: Implications for natural coastal resources and management”; Argentina, Chile, Peru, France, Germany, Spain). CENSOR’s zooplankton component focuses on trophodynamic impacts on the time series variability, especially in coastal areas.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus