Vertical distribution of mesozooplankton in the central and eastern Arabian Sea during the winter monsoon
G.Padmavati, P.Haridas, K.K.C.Nair, T.C.Gopalakrishnan,
P.Shiney and
M.Madhupratapl
Regional Centre of NIO, PB. 1913 Cochin 682 018 and 1National
Institute of Oceanography, Dona Paula, Goa 403 004, India
Abstract. The vertical distribution of mesozooplankton in the central
and eastern Arabian Sea was investigated during the winter monsoon in 1995.
Samples were analysed from discrete depth zones defined according to oxygen
and temperature profiles of the water column. Zooplankton had higher standing
stock in the mixed layer compared to the strata below. The mixed layer
had 78.5% of the total column biomass, while the deepest (500-1000 m) layer
accounted for only 0.9%. The stratum between 500 and 1000 m had the lowest
abundance of copepods as well as other zooplankton. A notable feature was
that zooplankton biomass and density did not show much variations between
coastal and offshore regions. Copepoda were the dominant group. Herbivores
were generally more abundant at all depths. A total of 94 species of calanoid
copepods were identified. Based on vertical distributions, they were assigned
to four groups: (i) species restricted to the upper 200 m; (ii) predominantly
surface-living species with tails to deeper waters; (iii) sparser deeper-living
species generally confined below 300 m; (iv) species occurring throughout
the water column. Diversity was fairly high in all strata with equitability
being higher in the deeper strata.