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  1. Jellyfish & Other Zooplankton - Woods Hole Oceanographic …

    Jul 14, 2020 · Zooplankton fill a crucial link between phytoplankton (“the grass of the sea”) and larger, open-ocean animals. Tiny copepods, krill, and pteropods are food for larger plankton, fish and even whales.

  2. Bongo Paired Zooplankton Net - Woods Hole Oceanographic …

    General Information One of the simplest biological samplers, zooplankton nets are made in a wide variety of styles and sizes. The two nets in the MARMAP Bongo vertical-haul net system shown here each have a mouth diameter of about 25 cm. History The …

  3. Plankton - Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

    Zooplankton can also be categorized according to size: nannoplankton are unicellular animals that feed on phytoplankton and are in turn eaten by other zooplankton (5/1000 mm to 60/1000 mm); microplankton (60/1000 mm to one mm) are composed primarily of eggs and larvae, usually of invertebrates; macroplankton (over one mm) often contain large ...

  4. Zooplankton Sampler (ZPS) - Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

    McLane Zooplankton Samplers are designed to collect zooplankton, in-situ, in support of oceanographic research projects and environmental monitoring programs. The ZPS 6-50 sample volume is carefully designed to avoid triggering zooplankton escape responses related to velocity or light gradients. Ambient water is drawn from the sample volume through mesh windows…

  5. Plankton, By Any Other Name - Woods Hole Oceanographic …

    Scientists usually divide plankton into three groups that align with major divisions of life. The plant-like organisms are phytoplankton (from phytos, Greek for plant); small animal plankton are zooplankton (from zoios, Greek for animal); and bacteria and archaea, minuscule cells that decompose material and recycle chemicals in the ocean, make up the bacterioplankton.

  6. Zooplankton - Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

    Zooplankton This squid, called Histioteuthis sp. , is about six inches long, and lives in the midwater depths, nearly 1,000 meters (3,000 feet) down. Its skin is covered with spots, called chromatophores, that let it change color at will.

  7. Phytoplankton - A Simple Guide | WHOI - Woods Hole …

    Aug 20, 2020 · Phytoplankton are primary producers of the ocean—the organisms that form the base of the food chain. WHOI explores the microscopic, single-celled organisms.

  8. Ocean Topic: Biological Carbon Pump - Woods Hole …

    Sep 10, 2020 · Small marine animals called zooplankton feed on phytoplankton and are, in turn, eaten by larger marine organisms. Although much of the carbon taken up by phytoplankton is recycled in the upper layers of ocean, the remaining portion sinks, eventually reaching depths at which the carbon will remain sequestered, or removed, for hundreds to ...

  9. Bacteria Hitchhike on Tiny Marine Life - Woods Hole …

    Feb 1, 2013 · Some may even be symbiotic with their host copepods, Aruda said. Researchers in Polz’s lab found that some Vibrios on living zooplankton produce antimicrobial compounds, maybe deterring other microbes. Aruda is investigating these ubiquitous relationships between copepods and bacteria—from both sides, the copepods’ and the bacteria’s.

  10. Midnight Zone - Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

    Nov 14, 2024 · Because zooplankton are central to the ocean food web, this zone plays a critical role in sustaining complex interactions among marine organisms. The midnight zone is also where many larvae spend time developing before they migrate to other regions of the ocean as adults.

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