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Effects of microplastics on marine copepods

open access: yesEcotoxicology and Environmental Safety, 2021
Microplastic contamination has been considered as a global environmental problem in marine ecosystem. Due to small size (< 5 mm) in overlapping with that of microalgae, microplastics can easily be ingested by a wide range of marine copepods both in the laboratory and in situ.
Minghua Wang
exaly   +4 more sources
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Photosynthesis in Copepods

Science, 1981
Zooplankton grazers consume appreciable amounts of algae that are not digested. Indigestibility has been considered of adaptive value to the algae and an unqualified disadvantage to the grazer. In Cartesian diver experiments, freshly killed copepods ( Acanthocyclops vernalis ) produced significant amounts of oxygen ...
R W, Epp, W M, Lewis
openaire   +2 more sources

Predation of calanoid copepods on their own and other copepods’ offspring

Marine Biology, 2014
Predation of eggs and nauplii by adult copepods is often used to explain unexpected death rates in population dynamics studies, but the phenomenon has been rarely investigated or quantified. Therefore, we studied the predatory feeding of adult females (Acartia clausi, Centropages hamatus, Centropages typicus, and Temora longicornis) on their own and ...
Maarten Boersma   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Effects of ocean acidification on copepods

Aquatic Toxicology, 2018
Ocean acidification (OA) leads to significant changes in seawater carbon chemistry, broadly affects marine organisms, and considered as a global threat to the fitness of marine ecosystems. Due to the crucial role of copepods in marine food webs of transferring energy from primary producers to higher trophic levels, numerous studies have been conducted ...
Minghua Wang   +2 more
exaly   +3 more sources

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