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  2. Zooplankton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zooplankton

    Important metazoan zooplankton include cnidarians such as jellyfish and the Portuguese Man o' War; crustaceans such as cladocerans, copepods, ostracods, isopods, amphipods, mysids and krill; chaetognaths (arrow worms); molluscs such as pteropods; and chordates such as salps and juvenile fish.

  3. Marine food web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_food_web

    They are very common in marine plankton communities, usually found in concentrations of about one per millilitre. They are the most important herbivores in the sea, the first link in the food chain. [23] Other particularly important groups of zooplankton are the copepods and krill.

  4. Plankton: Why these tiny creatures are the 'building blocks ...

    www.aol.com/plankton-why-tiny-creatures-building...

    Some of the largest plankton are krill and feed the largest of animals, baleen whales. My first foray into the scientific world was a job sexing Jassa falcata (a tiny amphipod) under a microscope.

  5. Plankton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plankton

    This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 5 February 2025. Organisms living in water or air that are drifters on the current or wind This article is about the marine organisms. For other uses, see Plankton (disambiguation). Marine microplankton and mesoplankton Part of the contents of one dip of a hand net. The image contains diverse planktonic ...

  6. Marine protists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_protists

    Zooplankton: Called nonconstitutive mixotrophs by Mitra et al., 2016. [40] Zooplankton that are photosynthetic: microzooplankton or metazoan zooplankton that acquire phototrophy through chloroplast retention a or maintenance of algal endosymbionts. Generalists Protists that retain chloroplasts and rarely other organelles from many algal taxa

  7. Gelatinous zooplankton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gelatinous_zooplankton

    Jellyfish are easy to capture and digest and may be more important as food sources than was previously thought. [1] Gelatinous zooplankton are fragile animals that live in the water column in the ocean. Their delicate bodies have no hard parts and are easily damaged or destroyed. [2] Gelatinous zooplankton are often transparent. [3]

  8. Copepod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copepod

    Planktonic copepods are important to global ecology and the carbon cycle. They are usually the dominant members of the zooplankton, and are major food organisms for small fish such as the dragonet, banded killifish, Alaska pollock, and other crustaceans such as krill in the ocean and in fresh water.

  9. Diel vertical migration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diel_vertical_migration

    Zooplankton and salps play a large role in the active transport of fecal pellets. 15–50% of zooplankton biomass is estimated to migrate, accounting for the transport of 5–45% of particulate organic nitrogen to depth. [40] Salps are large gelatinous plankton that can vertically migrate 800 meters and eat large amounts of food at the surface.