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      Temporal and spatial distribution of the cannonball jellyfish Stomolophus meleagris in the South Atlantic Bight, USA

      1 , 2 , 2 , 1
      Marine Ecology Progress Series
      Inter-Research Science Center

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          Abstract

          The cannonball jellyfish Stomolophus meleagris is one of the most abundant scyphozoan jellyfish in the South Atlantic Bight (SAB) of the southeastern USA. Like many scyphozoan jellyfish, cannonball jellies have high interannual variability and little is known about the environmental drivers of their distribution and phenology. To better understand the ecology of this commercially targeted species, we used fisheries-independent abundance and biomass data of S. meleagris from 2001 to 2019 collected by the Southeast Area Monitoring and Assessment Program (SEAMAP) throughout the coastal zone of the SAB. Average biomass of S. meleagris is highest in the spring off Georgia and southern South Carolina, and on average, the largest jellyfish were collected during the spring months. The lowest biomass was observed in the summer months when smaller jellyfish were caught at lower abundances in the coastal zone. These patterns suggest that mature S. meleagris medusae occur in the offshore area in the spring and move inshore toward estuarine habitats to sexually reproduce in the summer. Juvenile S. meleagris medusae move out of the estuaries as they mature throughout the summer and fall, and finally the surviving adults occur offshore again the next spring. The seasonal and spatial variability across the region is not correlated with local differences in temperature, salinity, chlorophyll a concentration, or river discharge, but is perhaps influenced by distance from the presumed source estuarine habitats and prevailing currents. While interannual variability in jellyfish biomass is high, no long-term trends or strong correlations with the tested environmental parameters were detected.

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          Anthropogenic causes of jellyfish blooms and their direct consequences for humans: a review

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            Zooplankton and the Ocean Carbon Cycle.

            Marine zooplankton comprise a phylogenetically and functionally diverse assemblage of protistan and metazoan consumers that occupy multiple trophic levels in pelagic food webs. Within this complex network, carbon flows via alternative zooplankton pathways drive temporal and spatial variability in production-grazing coupling, nutrient cycling, export, and transfer efficiency to higher trophic levels. We explore current knowledge of the processing of zooplankton food ingestion by absorption, egestion, respiration, excretion, and growth (production) processes. On a global scale, carbon fluxes are reasonably constrained by the grazing impact of microzooplankton and the respiratory requirements of mesozooplankton but are sensitive to uncertainties in trophic structure. The relative importance, combined magnitude, and efficiency of export mechanisms (mucous feeding webs, fecal pellets, molts, carcasses, and vertical migrations) likewise reflect regional variability in community structure. Climate change is expected to broadly alter carbon cycling by zooplankton and to have direct impacts on key species.
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              Organism life cycles, predation, and the structure of marine pelagic ecosystems

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Marine Ecology Progress Series
                Mar. Ecol. Prog. Ser.
                Inter-Research Science Center
                0171-8630
                1616-1599
                August 24 2023
                August 24 2023
                : 717
                : 51-65
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of South Carolina, Department of Biological Sciences, Columbia, SC 29208, USA
                [2 ]South Carolina Department of Natural Resources, Marine Resources Research Institute, Charleston, SC 29412, USA
                Article
                10.3354/meps14381
                e068b5a7-aba1-4768-ad25-21f41ce02b36
                © 2023

                https://www.int-res.com/journals/terms-of-use/

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