www.ocean-sci-discuss.net/1/21/2004/ © Author(s) 2004. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. The reliability of grazing rate estimates from dilution experiments: Have we over-estimated rates of organic carbon consumption? Marine Microbial Ecology Group, Laboratoire Oéanographique de Villefranche, CNRS UMR 7093, Université Paris VI, Station Zoologique, F-06230 Villefranche-Sur-Mer, France Abstract. According to a recent global analysis, microzooplankton grazing is surprisingly invariant, ranging only between 59 and 74% of phytoplankton primary production across systems differing in seasonality, trophic status, latitude, or salinity. Thus an important biological process in the world ocean, the daily consumption of recently fixed carbon, appears nearly constant. We believe this conclusion is an artefact because dilution experiments are 1) prone to providing over-estimates of grazing rates and 2) unlikely to furnish evidence of low grazing rates. In our view the overall average rate of microzooplankton grazing probably does not exceed 50% of primary production and may be even lower in oligotrophic systems. Discussion Paper (PDF, 368 KB) Interactive Discussion (Final Response, 2 Comments) Citation: Dolan, J. R. and McKeon, K.: The reliability of grazing rate estimates from dilution experiments: Have we over-estimated rates of organic carbon consumption?, Ocean Sci. Discuss., 1, 21-36, 2004. Bibtex EndNote Reference Manager |