Zooplankton
Zooplankton like krill may be small, but they are mighty! Because so many marine animals depend on these tiny animals for food, their size and abundance can tell researchers a lot about how healthy an ecosystem is. When there's lots of krill, there also tends to be plenty of seabirds and marine mammals around. Researchers from Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary work with ACCESS Partnership to survey the zooplankton in the sanctuary -- check out our video to learn more! #EarthIsBlue
Transcript
Today you’ll see how we operate a tucker
trawl net. A tucker trawl net has three different
nets, and it samples the water column at three
different levels. We’re looking at zooplankton.
Zooplankton being krill, copepods, and other
gelatinous invertebrates.
The zooplankton, after it’s caught in the net, is washed
down through the cod end, and then we separate
it out in the lab, count it and quantify it.
This information about the quantities and quality
of the zooplankton gives us a lot of good information on the health of our marine ecosystem.
In years where we have an abundance
of krill, we also directly see a good abundance
of seabirds and marine mammals. In years where
the krill is either smaller or fewer, then
we will see fewer birds and fewer marine mammals.