The feeding ecology of Neomysis mercedis Holmes in the Fraser River estuary

N. mercedis in the Fraser River estuary is a predator on the meiobenthos, especially harpacticoid copepods. There are no clear seasonal differences in its utilization of food resources. The consumption rate of N. mercedis feeding from natural sediments varies with body size and temperature as C = 3....

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Main Author: Johnston, N. Thomas
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/22497
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-224972018-01-05T17:41:41Z The feeding ecology of Neomysis mercedis Holmes in the Fraser River estuary Johnston, N. Thomas N. mercedis in the Fraser River estuary is a predator on the meiobenthos, especially harpacticoid copepods. There are no clear seasonal differences in its utilization of food resources. The consumption rate of N. mercedis feeding from natural sediments varies with body size and temperature as C = 3.81*(W**0.782)*(T**0.515), where C is the consumption rate of meiofauna in ug dry weight/animal/h, W is the mysid size in mg dry weight, and T is the temperature in degrees C. The weight dependence of the ingestion rate is identical to that of the metabolic rate but the temperature dependence is significantly lower. The mysid selectively feeds on the animal fraction of the sediments but only one-half of the ingested material (by weight) is of biological origin. In mid-April, mysid predation may result in a 12% per day mortality rate on harpacticoid copepods. Thus, mysid predation may strongly influence meiofaunal densities. The availability of food resources may contribute to the observed cessation of mysid population growth in late summer. Science, Faculty of Zoology, Department of Graduate 2010-03-25T12:59:27Z 2010-03-25T12:59:27Z 1981 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/22497 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description N. mercedis in the Fraser River estuary is a predator on the meiobenthos, especially harpacticoid copepods. There are no clear seasonal differences in its utilization of food resources. The consumption rate of N. mercedis feeding from natural sediments varies with body size and temperature as C = 3.81*(W**0.782)*(T**0.515), where C is the consumption rate of meiofauna in ug dry weight/animal/h, W is the mysid size in mg dry weight, and T is the temperature in degrees C. The weight dependence of the ingestion rate is identical to that of the metabolic rate but the temperature dependence is significantly lower. The mysid selectively feeds on the animal fraction of the sediments but only one-half of the ingested material (by weight) is of biological origin. In mid-April, mysid predation may result in a 12% per day mortality rate on harpacticoid copepods. Thus, mysid predation may strongly influence meiofaunal densities. The availability of food resources may contribute to the observed cessation of mysid population growth in late summer. === Science, Faculty of === Zoology, Department of === Graduate
author Johnston, N. Thomas
spellingShingle Johnston, N. Thomas
The feeding ecology of Neomysis mercedis Holmes in the Fraser River estuary
author_facet Johnston, N. Thomas
author_sort Johnston, N. Thomas
title The feeding ecology of Neomysis mercedis Holmes in the Fraser River estuary
title_short The feeding ecology of Neomysis mercedis Holmes in the Fraser River estuary
title_full The feeding ecology of Neomysis mercedis Holmes in the Fraser River estuary
title_fullStr The feeding ecology of Neomysis mercedis Holmes in the Fraser River estuary
title_full_unstemmed The feeding ecology of Neomysis mercedis Holmes in the Fraser River estuary
title_sort feeding ecology of neomysis mercedis holmes in the fraser river estuary
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/22497
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