Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6383782 Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The vertical migration and diel feeding periodicity of the skinnycheek lanternfish (Benthosema pterotum) were studied by use of a hull-mounted 38 kHz echo sounder, ROV-deployments and net-sampling at two locations (∼24°48′N, ∼36°15′E and ∼21°27′N, ∼38°5′E) in the central Red Sea. The mesopelagic zone of the Red Sea represents an unusual environment with very high temperatures (∼22 °C) and low zooplankton concentrations (<10 individuals m−3 below 600 m). The skinnycheek lanternfish performed normal diel vertical migration from ∼500 to 750 m during daytime to the epipelagic zone (upper ∼200 m) at night. A strict feeding periodicity occurred; with the skinnycheek lanternfish foraging on zooplankton throughout the night, while rapidly digesting the preceding nocturnal meal in the warm mesopelagic region. We hypothesize that the constrained epipelagic distribution of zooplankton and the unusual warm waters of the Red Sea force the whole population to ascend and feed in epipelagic waters every night, as the prey-ration eaten each night is fully digested at mesopelagic depths during daytime.

► DVM by the whole Red Sea-population of Benthosema pterotum. ► Feeds in the epipelagic zone throughout the night. ► Preceding nocturnal meal is fully digested in the mesopelagic region during daytime. ► Governed by epipelagic prey-distribution and the unusual warm waters of the Red Sea. ► Benthosema sp. can be an important year-round contributor to the biological pump.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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