The distribution, behavior and metabolism of the mesopelagic jellyfish, Periphylla periphylla (Péron & Lesueur), were investigated in Lurefjorden, Norway. Field studies, conducted in 1998–1999 with plankton nets and a remotely operated vehicle, indicated that 80-90% of the dense (up to 2.5 m−3) population migrated 200–400 m vertically each day throughout the year. In situ observations with red light revealed that swimming rates and feeding activity varied with age and time of day. Detection of turbulence and contact with surfaces caused this medusa to conceal one or all of its tentacles in the stomach or to shed nematocyst-laden tissue from the tentacles. Stomachs of medusae collected with nets were often full of prey entangled with the sloughed tissue. Stomachs of medusae captured individually with ROV samplers were empty or contained only a few prey in their stomachs (typically, 1–4 copepods Calanus spp. or chaetognaths Eukrohnia hamata Möbius per medusa). Low rates (0.4–5.6 μl O2 mg C−1 h−1) of oxygen consumption of P. periphylla suggested that this species was sustained by relatively few (1–34) prey d−1.
Member of
Contributors
Publisher
Kluwer Academic Publishers
Date Issued
2001
Note
Language
Type
Genre
Extent
14 p.
Subject (Topical)
Identifier
2783234
Additional Information
The distribution, behavior and metabolism of the mesopelagic jellyfish, Periphylla periphylla (Péron & Lesueur), were investigated in Lurefjorden, Norway. Field studies, conducted in 1998–1999 with plankton nets and a remotely operated vehicle, indicated that 80-90% of the dense (up to 2.5 m−3) population migrated 200–400 m vertically each day throughout the year. In situ observations with red light revealed that swimming rates and feeding activity varied with age and time of day. Detection of turbulence and contact with surfaces caused this medusa to conceal one or all of its tentacles in the stomach or to shed nematocyst-laden tissue from the tentacles. Stomachs of medusae collected with nets were often full of prey entangled with the sloughed tissue. Stomachs of medusae captured individually with ROV samplers were empty or contained only a few prey in their stomachs (typically, 1–4 copepods Calanus spp. or chaetognaths Eukrohnia hamata Möbius per medusa). Low rates (0.4–5.6 μl O2 mg C−1 h−1) of oxygen consumption of P. periphylla suggested that this species was sustained by relatively few (1–34) prey d−1.
Florida Atlantic University. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute contribution #1461.
Date Backup
2001
Date Text
2001
DOI
10.1023/A:1011874828960
Date Issued (EDTF)
2001
Extension
FAU
FAU
admin_unit="FAU01", ingest_id="ing7734", creator="creator:SPATEL", creation_date="2010-10-07 13:25:57", modified_by="super:FAUDIG", modification_date="2014-02-10 10:51:35"
IID
FADT2783234
Issuance
single unit
Person Preferred Name
Youngbluth, Marsh J.
creator
myoungb2@fau.edu
Physical Description
14 p.
Title Plain
Distribution, abundance, behavior and metabolism of Periphylla periphylla, a mesopelagic coronate medusa in a Norwegian fjord
Origin Information
Kluwer Academic Publishers
2001
single unit
Title
Distribution, abundance, behavior and metabolism of Periphylla periphylla, a mesopelagic coronate medusa in a Norwegian fjord
Other Title Info
Distribution, abundance, behavior and metabolism of Periphylla periphylla, a mesopelagic coronate medusa in a Norwegian fjord