Feeding, Respiration and Excretion of the Copepod <i>Calanus hyperboreus</i> from Baffin Bay, Including Waters Contaminated by Oil Seeps

Authors

  • Edward S. Gilfillan
  • John H. Vandermeulen
  • Sherry Hanson

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14430/arctic2064

Keywords:

Animal food, Copepoda, Oil spills, Zooplankton, Baffin Bay-Davis Strait, Lancaster Sound, Nunavut

Abstract

Metabolic processes in eastern arctic copepods Calanus hyperboreus were analyzed during the post-bloom period (August-September). Mixed adult and subadult copepods were collected from 12 stations in Baffin Bay (Davis Strait to Lancaster Sound) by trawling from 0-300 m. Measurements were made of clearance rate, O2-consumption and NH3 excretion. The cruise track included 6 stations in oil-seep contaminated waters of Scott Inlet and Buchan Gulf. Physiological parameters for populations of C. hyperboreus from the latter stations were compared with those from non-seep stations. Mean O2 consumption rates (0.309 - 0.907 µl O2 / mg dry wt / h) for all stations were similar to those described for Antarctic calanoid species but were higher than reported for more northern arctic waters. Mean ammonia excretion rates (0.023 - 0.071 µg N / mg dry wt / h) were somewhat lower than reported for comparable Antarctic species and were similar to values from other eastern arctic studies. O:N ratios for 11 of the 12 stations occupied ranged between 8.4 and 22.1, indicative of protein-based metabolism. The single exception was a High Arctic station with O:N ratio 43.6. Clearance rates were low to nonexistant for all stations. Most of the non-feeding values came from the Scott Inlet-Buchan Gulf region of western Baffin Bay. At those stations in this region a strong negative correlation (P<.01) exists between clearance rate and hydrocarbon contamination. This suggests that in the oil-seep region of Baffin Bay feeding may be suppressed in Calanus hyperboreus by low concentrations of petroleum hydrocarbons derived from sub-sea seepage.

Key words: zooplankton, Calanus hyperboreus, Arctic, metabolism, oil seep, petroleum, hydrocarbons, oil pollution

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Published

1986-01-01