释义 |
zooplanktonenUK
zo·o·plank·ton Z0025600 (zō′ə-plăngk′tən)n. Plankton that consists of animals, including copepods, rotifers, jellyfish, and the larvae of sessile animals such as coral and sea anemones. zo′o·plank·ton′ic (-tŏn′ĭk) adj.zooplankton (ˌzəʊəˈplæŋktən) n (Zoology) the animal constituent of plankton, which consists mainly of small crustaceans and fish larvae. Compare phytoplanktonzo•o•plank•ton (ˌzoʊ əˈplæŋk tən) n. the aggregate of animal or animallike organisms in plankton. Compare phytoplankton. [1900–05] zo·o·plank·ton (zō′ə-plăngk′tən) Plankton that consists of tiny animals, such as rotifers, copepods, and krill, and of microorganisms once classified as animals, such as dinoflagellates and other protozoans.zooplanktonA type of plankton consisting of small animals, such as corals.ThesaurusNoun | 1. | zooplankton - animal constituent of plankton; mainly small crustaceans and fish larvaeanimal, animate being, beast, creature, fauna, brute - a living organism characterized by voluntary movementplankton - the aggregate of small plant and animal organisms that float or drift in great numbers in fresh or salt water | TranslationszooplanktonenUK
zooplankton: see marine biologymarine biology, study of ocean plants and animals and their ecological relationships. Marine organisms may be classified (according to their mode of life) as nektonic, planktonic, or benthic. Nektonic animals are those that swim and migrate freely, e.g. ..... Click the link for more information. .Zooplankton Animals that inhabit the water column of oceans and lakes and lack the means to counteract transport currents. Zooplankton inhabit all layers of these water bodies to the greatest depths sampled, and constitute a major link between primary production and higher trophic levels in aquatic ecosystems. Many zooplankton are capable of strong swimming movements and may migrate vertically from tens to hundreds of meters; others have limited mobility and depend more on water turbulence to stay afloat. All zooplankton, however, lack the ability to maintain their position against the movement of large water masses. Zooplankton can be divided into various operational categories. One means of classification is based on developmental stages and divides animals into meroplankton and holoplankton. Meroplanktonic forms spend only part of their life cycles as plankton and include larvae of benthic worms, mollusks, crustaceans, echinoderms, coral, and even insects, as well as the eggs and larvae of many fishes. Holoplankton spend essentially their whole existence in the water column. Examples are chaetognaths, pteropods, larvaceans, siphonophores, and many copepods. Nearly every major taxonomic group of animals has either meroplanktonic or holoplanktonic members. Size is another basis of grouping all plankton. A commonly accepted size classification scheme includes the groupings: picoplankton (<2 micrometers), nanoplankton (2– 20 μm), microplankton (20–200 μm), mesoplankton (0.2–20 mm), macroplankton (20–200 mm), and megaplankton (>200 mm). The classic description of the trophic dynamics of plankton is a food chain consisting of algae grazed by crustacean zooplankton which are in turn ingested by fishes. This model may hold true to a degree in some environments such as upwelling areas, but it masks the complexity of most natural food webs. Zooplankton have an essential role in linking trophic levels, but several intermediate zooplankton consumers can exist between the primary producers (phytoplankton) and fish. Thus, food webs with multiple links to different organisms indicate the versatility of food choice and energy transfer and are a more realistic description of the planktonic trophic interactions. Size is of major importance in planktonic food webs. Most zooplankton tend to feed on organisms that have a body size smaller than their own. However, factors other than size also modify feeding interactions. Some phytoplankton are noxious and are avoided by zooplankton, and others are ingested but not digested. Furthermore, zooplankton frequently assume different feeding habits as they grow from larval to adult form. They may ingest bacteria or phytoplankton at one stage of their life cycle and become raptorial feeders later. Other zooplankton are primarily herbivorous but also ingest heterotrophic protists and can opportunistically become carnivorous. Consequently, omnivory, which is considered rare in terrestrial systems, is a relatively common trophic strategy in the plankton. In all food webs, some individuals die without being consumed and are utilized by scavengers and ultimately by decomposers (bacteria and fungi). See Ecology, Ecosystem, Marine ecology, Phytoplankton zooplankton[¦zō·ə′plaŋk·tən] (ecology) Microscopic animals which move passively in aquatic ecosystems. zooplanktonenUK
zooplankton (zo?o-plank'ton) [? + planktos, wandering] A small animal organism present in natural waters. See: phytoplanktonzooplankton that part of the plankton made up of animal life. Compare PHYTOPLANKTON.zooplanktonenUK
Words related to zooplanktonnoun animal constituent of planktonRelated Words- animal
- animate being
- beast
- creature
- fauna
- brute
- plankton
|