Salps are holoplanktonic grazers that have a life history, feeding biology and population dynamic strikingly different from copepods or other crustacean zooplankton. They can occur in very dense populations that cover large areas, and these blooms have been shown to have major impacts due to grazing and production of fast?sinking fecal pellets. However the conditions supporting bloom formation, and the energetics, reproduction and behavior of the bloom?forming salps are still poorly understood. This study will focus on two species of salps that are global in their distribution and representative of two genera that commonly form large blooms. Salpa aspera regularly occurs during the summer in high concentrations in the slope waters of the Mid?Atlantic Bight, while Thalia democratica regularly forms dense populations during the winter spring in the Georgia Bight. The investigators will examine feeding, metabolism, growth, reproduction and population dynamics of these salps. They will use two independent modeling approaches, grounded in experimental and field data, to extend their observations to other time and space scales. interpret ouexperimental and modeling results will be interpreted within the context of the environmental conditions to which the salps are exposed. This integrated approach will provide the best basis for understanding how salp blooms form and persist. Results of this study will extend to other species that occur in high densities in many locations, allowing scientists to better evaluate the importance of salps in biogeochemical cycles and in structuring the pelagic environment.
Dataset | Latest Version Date | Current State |
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Abundance, size, fecundity of Salpa aspera in the Slope Waters off northeastern USA from R/V Oceanus OC379, OC381 in the slope waters off NJ, DE, MD from June-Sept. 2002 (SalpSwarmDyn project) | 2009-07-14 | Final no updates expected |
Chlorophyll data associated with salp swarm collections in the Slope Waters off northeastern USA from R/V Oceanus OC370, OC379, OC381 in the slope waters off NJ, DE, MD from 2001-2002 (SalpSwarmDyn project) | 2009-07-02 | Final no updates expected |
Lead Principal Investigator: Dr Laurence P. Madin
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI)
Co-Principal Investigator: Dr Patricia Kremer
University of Connecticut (UConn)
BCO-DMO Data Manager: Ms Dicky Allison
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)
BCO-DMO Data Manager: Nancy Copley
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO)