Feeding by larvae of intertidal invertebrates: Assessing their position in pelagic food webs

Vargas, CA; Manriquez, PH; Navarrete, SA

Abstract

One of the leading determinants of the structure and dynamics of marine populations is the rate of arrival of new individuals to local sites. While physical transport processes play major roles in delivering larvae to the shore, these processes become most important after larvae have survived the perils of life in the plankton, where they usually suffer great mortality. The lack of information regarding larval feeding makes it difficult to assess the effects of food supply on larval survival, or the role larvae may play in nearshore food webs. Here, we examine the spectrum of food sizes and food types consumed by the larvae of two intertidal barnacle species and of the predatory gastropod Concholepas concholepas. We conducted replicated experiments in which larvae were exposed to the food size spectrum (phytoplankton, microprotozoan and autotrophic picoplankton) found in nearshore waters in central Chile. Results show that barnacle nauplii and gastropod veligers are omnivorous grazers, incorporating significant fractions of heterotrophs in their diets. In accordance with their feeding mechanisms and body size, barnacle nauplii were able to feed on autotrophic picoplankton (<5 μm) and did not consume the largest phytoplankton cells, which made the bulk of phytoplankton biomass in spring-summer blooms. Balanoid nauplii exhibited higher ingestion rates than the smaller-bodied chthamaloid larvae. Newly hatched C. concholepas larvae also consumed picoplankton cells, while competent larvae of this species ingested mostly the largest phytoplankton cells and heterotrophic protozoans. Results suggest that persistent changes in the structure of pelagic food webs can have important effects on the species-specific food availability for invertebrate larvae, which can result in large-scale differences in recruitment rates of a given species, and in the relative recruitment success of the different species that make up benthic communities. © 2006 by the Ecological Society of America.

Más información

Título según WOS: Feeding by larvae of intertidal invertebrates: Assessing their position in pelagic food webs
Título según SCOPUS: Feeding by larvae of intertidal invertebrates: Assessing their position in pelagic food webs
Título de la Revista: Ecology
Volumen: 87
Número: 2
Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 2006
Página de inicio: 444
Página final: 457
Idioma: English
URL: http://www.esajournals.org/doi/abs/10.1890/05-0265
DOI:

10.1890/05-0265

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS