Document of bibliographic reference 352428

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Book chapters
BibLvlCode
AM
Title
Gelatinous
Abstract
Gelatinous zooplankton (GZ) is a non-taxonomic term for jelly-like organisms that have a high proportion of water in body tissues. Advantages in being gelatinous include better buoyancy, transparency, larger sizes with lower carbon investment, rapid growth, and body plasticity. Most GZ taxa have different pathways of asexual reproduction and their populations rapidly increase in response to favorable conditions, forming extensive agglomerations (blooms). Bloom dynamics depend on multiple environmental drivers and can be enhanced by physical transport. GZ blooms have implications for vertical flux of particulate matter via production of fecal pellets and carcasses. Feeding mechanisms and trophic niches of GZ are diverse, ranging from suspension-feeding on small particles to voracious predators, but GZ have been historically considered trophic dead ends; however, a variety of animals feed occasionally, regularly, or exclusively on these organisms. It has been hypothesized that GZ blooms are increasing globally, in response to anthropogenic stressors such as climate change, eutrophication, hypoxia, and overfishing. Although GZ blooms have been recurrently reported, evidence to support a global GZ increase is relatively weak. Most data on GZ are spatially, temporally, and taxonomically limited, cover few populations, and cannot account for the role of multiple natural drivers (e.g. ocean-atmosphere oscillations).
Bibliographic citation
Giachini Tosetto, E.; Baldoni, L.C.; Dutto, S.; Hidaka, M.; Lindsay, D.J.; Nagata, R.M. (2022). Gelatinous, in: Pan, J. et al. Marine biology - A functional approach to the oceans and their organisms. pp. 150-179. https://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9780429399244-9
Topic
Marine

Authors

author
Name
Everton Giachini Tosetto
author
Name
Letícia Baldoni
author
Name
Sofia Dutto
author
Name
Mitsuko Hidaka
author
Name
Dhugal Lindsay
author
Name
Renato Nagata

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9780429399244-9

Document metadata

date created
2022-06-10
date modified
2022-06-10