Zooplankton biodiversity and temporal dynamics (2005-2015) in a coastal station in western Portugal (Northeastern Atlantic Ocean)

PeerJ. 2023 Nov 21:11:e16387. doi: 10.7717/peerj.16387. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Long-term monitoring of zooplankton assemblages provides essential knowledge to assess key factors impacting marine ecosystems. Despite the importance of this type of data, monitoring stations worldwide are spatially and temporally limited due to the difficulty of maintaining them. In the northeastern Atlantic area, Cascais-Watch is one monitoring site operating since 2005, despite some constraints throughout the years, and has allowed the collection of important data on the zooplankton communities of the area. The present work summarizes the knowledge collected until 2015 on the biodiversity and dynamics of zooplankton in the site. The results showed a year-round high productivity of the zooplankton abundance, biomass and diversity for the area, with no significant general trends or periodicity, despite the relatively lower winter and higher spring values. The results revealed two main transition periods with marked changes in species composition and dominance of the most abundant taxa. This shift was tentatively attributed to the extended annual dry season verified in Portugal after 2011, the low values of upwelling and precipitation, and the warmer waters. The zooplankton abundance presented an interannual increase for spring periods, and the proportion of Copepoda, the dominant taxa, was lower during summer months, corresponding to increased abundances of Mollusca, Diplostraca (Cladocera) and Cnidaria. In particular, the study shows an increasing abundance of the gelatinous species (particularly Cnidaria) for spring/summer months in recent years, suggesting changes in primary production and prey dynamics. Other relevant tendencies were the higher abundance of meroplankton, such as Bivalvia and fish larvae/eggs, and the decreasing trend in the abundance of the meroplanktonic coastal crustaceans, Decapoda and Cirripedia taxa, highlighting possible changes in the benthic coastal populations in the study region. The present study highlights probable changes and trends in the zooplankton community that should be monitored in the following years.

Keywords: Abundance; Biomass; Cascais Watch; Lisbon Bay; Plankton; Temporal variability; Time series; Trends.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Atlantic Ocean
  • Biodiversity
  • Cnidaria*
  • Ecosystem*
  • Portugal
  • Zooplankton

Grants and funding

The research was supported by the projects, Jellyfisheries—Towards an integrated approach to enhance predictive accuracy of jellyfish impact on coastal marine ecosystems (PTDC/MAR-BIO/0440/2014), MarinEye—A prototype for multitrophic oceanic monitoring (EEA Grants PT02_Aviso4_0017), BIOMETORE—Biodiversity in seamounts: the Madeira-Tore and Great Meteor (EEA Grants PT02_Aviso2_001) and by the European Marine Observation Data Network (EMODnet) Biology project (EMFF/2019/1.3.1.9/Lot 6/SI2.837974-EMODnet-Biology), funded by the European Union under Regulation (EU) No 508/2014 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 May 2014 on the European Maritime and Fisheries. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.