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Zooplankton: Types & Ecological Roles

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Zooplankton

Zooplankton are small, drifting, heterotrophic organisms in aquatic environments that consume phytoplankton, bacteria, or other zooplankton. They cannot swim against currents and range from protozoans to tiny crustaceans like copepods and krill .They are found in both marine and freshwater habitats.

Examples include:

  • Protozoans: Foraminiferans, radiolarians, dinoflagellates
  • Crustaceans: Copepods, krill, amphipods, cladocerans
  • Others: Jellyfish larvae, fish larvae, salps

Like phytoplankton, environmental and oceanographic factors continuously influence the abundance, composition, nutritional quality, and spatial distribution of zooplankton. These include the abundance and type of phytoplankton present in the water, as well as the water’s temperature, salinity, oxygen, and pH. 

Features

  • Drifting Lifestyle: Zooplankton float or drift in water currents and can’t swim against them, though some can perform limited vertical movements. They inhabit the entire water column—from sunlit surface to deeper layers.
  • They vary widely in size.
  • They are primarily heterotrophic, consuming phytoplankton, bacteria, other zooplankton, and detritus.Zooplankton can be herbivores, carnivores, or omnivores, but a large portion of them primarily consume phytoplankton (microscopic plants)
  • Most zooplankton are microscopic but some (such as jellyfish) are macroscopic, meaning they can be seen with the naked eye.
  • Vertical Migration: Many perform diel vertical migration (DVM), moving upward at night to feed and descending during the day to avoid predators. This movement also contributes significantly to carbon transport via the biological pump. 
  • Form the critical link in marine food webs, transferring energy to fish, seabirds, and mammal.
  • Support carbon and nutrient cycles through feeding, excretion, and sinking of organic matter
  • Indicator of Environmental Health:Rapidly respond to changes in nutrient levels, temperature, pollution, and salinity. Used in environmental monitoring for assessing water quality and ecosystem health.

Ecological Roles & Functions

  • Linking Marine Food Webs
    • Zooplankton act as primary consumers, transferring energy from producers (phytoplankton) to larger predators like fish and whales . Krill, for example, form a massive biomass consumed by whales, seals, and seabirds .
  • Carbon & Nutrient Cycling
    • They drive the biological pump by grazing, producing fecal pellets, vertical migration, and carcasses—all transporting carbon to deeper waters.
      • Zooplankton help move carbon from the ocean’s surface to its depths through three main actions:
        • Feeding on phytoplankton and making waste (fecal pellets).
        • Diel vertical migration—Zooplankton ascend at night to feed and descend by day, moving carbon to depth  .
        • Their daily deaths, when carcasses sink.
      • These processes collectively transfer carbon-rich organic matter into deeper waters, making them a crucial part of the biological carbon pump
    • Lipid pump: Overwintering copepods sequester carbon in depth via lipid metabolism

Importance

  • Support fisheries by sustaining fish populations via energy transfer  .
  • Indicator species: Their abundance and diversity reflect water quality, temperature changes, and pollution levels  .
  • Climate regulation: Their roles in carbon sequestration help reduce atmospheric CO₂ levels  .

Zooplankton are drifting, diverse, and ecologically vital. Ranging in size from microscopic protozoans to visible jellyfish, they connect the food web, support nutrient cycling, and act as bioindicators. Their diel migrations and mass biomass influence not only aquatic life but also broader climate systems.

FAQs on Zooplankton

Q1. What are zooplankton?

Zooplankton are heterotrophic, drifting animal-like organisms in aquatic environments—including microscopic protozoans and small crustaceans—that cannot swim against currents  .

Q2. What types of organisms are considered zooplankton?

They range from protozoans (like ciliates, foraminiferans) to metazoans (copepods, krill, jellyfish larvae, fish and crustacean larvae)  .

Q3. How do zooplankton differ from phytoplankton?

Phytoplankton are photosynthetic autotrophs, while zooplankton are consumers that feed on phytoplankton, other zooplankton, bacteria, and detritus

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