• Title/Summary/Keyword: Chaetognatha

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Day-Night Differences in Zooplankton Catches in the Coastal Area of Active Tidal Mixing (조류에 의한 혼합이 활발한 연안역에서의 동물 플랑크톤 채집량의 주야 차이)

  • PARK, CHUL
    • 한국해양학회지
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    • v.25 no.3
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    • pp.151-159
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    • 1990
  • For the test of zooplankton's ability to migrate vertically in the coastal area of active tidal mixing, day-night differences in zooplankton catches were examined. Some taxa such as large Copepods, My side, chaetognatha and Bivalve larva showed high abundances at surface layer at night suggesting the presence of vertical migration even in this shallow coastal area of active tidal mixing. Previously used methods of sampling were reviewed to find a proper sampling method in the Korean western coastal area.

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Metagenomic Approach on the Eukaryotic Plankton Biodiversity in Coastal Water of Busan (Korea) (부산 연안역의 진핵플랑크톤 종다양성에 대한 메타게놈 분석 연구)

  • Yoon, Ji-Mie;Lee, Jee-Eun;Lee, Sang-Rae;Rho, Tae-Keun;Lee, Jin-Ae;Chung, Ik-Kyo;Lee, Tong-Sup
    • The Sea:JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN SOCIETY OF OCEANOGRAPHY
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    • v.17 no.2
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    • pp.59-75
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    • 2012
  • The species composition of plankton is essential to understand the material and energy cycling within marine ecosystem. It also provides the useful information for understanding the properties of marine environments due to its sensitivity to the physicochemical characteristics and variability of water masses. In this study we adopted metagenomics to evaluate eukaryotic plankton species diversity from coastal waters off Busan. Characteristics of water masses at sampling sites is expected to be very complex due to the mixing of various water masses; Nakdong River runoff, Changjiang diluted water (CDW), South Sea coastal water, and Tsushima warm current. 18S rDNA clone libraries were constructed from surface waters at the three sites off Busan. Clone libraries revealed 94 unique phylotypes from 370 clones; Dinophyceae(42 phylotypes), Ciliophora(15 phylotypes), Bacillariophyta(7 phylotypes), Chlorophyta(2 phylotypes), Haptophyceae(1 phylotype), Metazoa(Arthropoda( 17 phylotypes), Chaetognatha(1 phylotypes), Cnidaria(2 phylotypes), Chordata(1 phylotype)), Rhizaria (Acantharea(2 phylotypes), Polycystinea(1 phylotype)), Telonemida(1 phylotype), Fungi(2 phylotypes). The difference in species diversity at the closely located three sites off Busan may be attributed to the various physicochemical properties of water masses at these sites by the mixture of water masses of various origins. Metagenomic study of species composition may provide useful information for understanding marine ecosystem of coastal waters with various physicochemical properties in the near feature.

Feeding Habits of Hairtail, Trichiurus lepturus (갈치 (Trichiurus lepturus)의 식성)

  • Huh, Sung-Hoi
    • Korean Journal of Ichthyology
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    • v.11 no.2
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    • pp.191-197
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    • 1999
  • Stomach contents of hairtail, Trichiurus lepturus collected in the Nakdong River Estuary were examined quantitatively. T. lepturus was a carnivore which consumed mainly fishes, crustaceans (such as copepods, euphausiids and shrimps) and chaetognaths. Its diets included small quantities of small squids. T. lepturus showed ontogenetic progression of three feeding stages : an initial feeding stage was a planktivorous stage in which copepods were the major food item, followed by a mixed feeding stage in which euphausiids, mysids, shrimps, chaetognaths and fishes were the major food items, and finally a piscivorous stage in which fishes were the major food item. Especially anchovies were heavily selected by large T. lepturus.

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The Spatio-temporal Distribution of Zooplankton Communities in the Northern Yellow Sea During Autumn and Winter (가을-겨울철 황해 북부의 동물플랑크톤 시공분포 특성)

  • Lim, Dong-Hyun;Yoon, Won-Duk;Yang, Joon-Yong;Lee, Yoon
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Marine Environment & Safety
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    • v.15 no.4
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    • pp.339-344
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    • 2009
  • The joint cruises of six times between Korea and China were carried out for a better understanding of the environmental and oceanographical characteristics of the Yellow Sea for 6 years from 1998 to 2003. Zooplankton samples were collected one time per year at 24 stations on 3 lines of the Yellow Sea. The aim of this study is to understand the seasonal fluctuation of zooplankton community in the Yellow Sea. There is no trend on the spatio-temporal distribution of zooplankton. Copepoda, the major taxon of the Yellow Sea, was high in distribution in the eastern part and Chaetognatha in the western part of the Yellow Sea. In this results, the dominant copepods were Calanus sinicus, Paracalanus parvus s.l., Oithona atlantica, and Corycaeus affinis during the study periods. The density fluctuation of these dominant species may be an important factor in determining the fisheries resource of the Yellow Sea.

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Feeding Habits of Jack Mackerel , Trachurus japonicus , Collected from the Nakdong River Estuary (낙동강 하구해역에서 채집된 전갱이(Trachurus japonicus)의 식성)

  • Huh, Sung-Hoi;Cha, Byung-Yul
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Fisheries and Ocean Technology
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    • v.34 no.3
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    • pp.320-327
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    • 1998
  • The feeding habits of jack mackerel, Trachurus japonicus, collected from the Nakdong River estuary from February 1987 to January 1988 were studied. Jack mackerel(4~15cm SL) was a planktivore which fed mainly on copepods, amphipods and mysids. Its diets included small quantities of decapods, euphausiids, polychaetes, chaetognaths and fish larvae. Paracalanus parvus. Acartia clausi and Calanus sinicus were the three most abundant copepod species found in the stomach contents of jack mackerel. Jack mackerel showed ontogenetic changes in feeding habits. Small individuals of the fish(4~7cm SL) preyed heavily on copepods. However, the portion of copepods in stomach contents decreased with increasing fish size, and this decrease was compensated by an increased consumption of amphipods and mysids.

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Food of the Larval Gunnel, Enedrias fangi (흰베도라치, Enedrias fangi 치자어기의 식성)

  • KIM Jong Man;KIM Dong Yup;YOO Jae Myung;HUH Hyung Tack
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.18 no.5
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    • pp.484-490
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    • 1985
  • Gut contents of larval gunnels collected in Kyonggi Bay, Yellow Sea were examined in order to understand the feeding habit of the fish. There were some differences in the gut contents depending upon the body length of the fish. Most important food organisms were Copepoda followed by Appendicularia, fish eggs and Decapoda larvae. Although major food organisms were closely related to the size of zooplankton population, the fish showed a positive food selectivity for Copepoda with increasing body lengh, while there was a negative selectivity for Chaetognatha regardless of body length. However, there appeared to be no size preference on the food organisms by the larval gunnel.

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ON THE COMPOSITION AND THE ABUNDANCE DISTRIBUTION OF ZOOPLANKTON IN THE YELLOW SEA IN APRIL, 1981 (춘계 한국 서해역에서의 동물플랑크톤의 종조성 및 양적 분포에 관하여)

  • Shim, Jae Hyung;Park, Chul
    • 한국해양학회지
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    • v.17 no.2
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    • pp.95-101
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    • 1982
  • In order to the species composition and abundance distribution of zooplankton, quantitative samples collected in the Yellow Sea in April 1981 were analyzed. Ranges of temperatures and salinities of the study area were 4.55-9.80$^{\circ}C$ and 32.02-32.88 , respectively. Total 33 taxa were identified from all samples collected. Species composition along the stations showed no remarkable variations. Copepods were the most imporatnt components of zooplankton community in the study area. Dominant species of copepods were Oithona similis, Acartia clause and Centropages mcmurrichi. Appendicularia, Chaetognatha, Amphipod, and Euphausiid were distributed with minor abundance. Average biomass(wet weight) of zooplankton was 107mg/㎥, and the biomasses of zooplankton at offshore stations were greater than those of inshore stations in the study area. Average individual number of zooplankton was 1,915 indiv./㎥, and the variations along stations showed the same trend as in biomass. From the result of clustering with correlation coefficients calculated with the indivecual numbers per cubic meter for 20 zooplankton constituents at each station it was suggested that temperature had far reaching sffect on the distribution of zooplankton in the study area.

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Diet Composition of Coilia nasus in the Coastal Waters off Gori, Korea (고리 주변해역에서 출현하는 웅어 (Coilia nasus)의 위내용물 조성)

  • Baeck, Gun-Wook;Park, Joo-Myun;Choo, Hyun-Gi;Huh, Sung-Hoi
    • Korean Journal of Ichthyology
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    • v.23 no.2
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    • pp.163-167
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    • 2011
  • The feeding habits of Coilia nasus were studied using 107 specimens collected from January to December 2005 in the coastal waters off Gori, Korea. The size of C. nasus ranged from 8.4 to 29.5 cm in standard length (SL). C. nasus was a carnivore that mainly consumed shrimps and copepods. Its diet also included small quantities of amphipods, euphausiids and chaetognaths. The feeding strategy graphical method reveled than C. nasus was specialized feeder and showed narrow niche width. Both small and large size class of C. nasus mainly consumed shrimps and copepods, and did not showed significant size-related changes in feeding habits. However, the mean number and weight of preys per stomach was higher than large size class than small size class.

Seasonal occurrence characteristics of Aidanosagitta crassa morphotypes in coastal waters of Korea (한국 연안에 출현하는 Aidanosagitta crassa 형태 유형에 따른 분류학적 고찰 및 계절별 출현 특성)

  • Seohwi Choo;Man-Ki Jeong;Min Ho Seo;Young Seok Jeong;Jongjun Park;A-Young Shin;Ho Young Soh
    • Korean Journal of Environmental Biology
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    • v.42 no.3
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    • pp.267-278
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    • 2024
  • Aidanosagitta crassa, a key species in South Korea's coastal waters, exhibits three morphological types: Type C with a collarette-containing trunk, Type N lacking a collarette, and an intermediate Type I. Limited research studies have been conducted on their ecological patterns, prompting this study to elucidate seasonal occurrence patterns of A. crassa types in Pyeongtaek. Field surveys at six stations in Pyeongtaek port were conducted in winter (Feb.), spring (May), summer (Aug.), and autumn (Nov.) of 2010. Water temperature and salinity were measured and zooplankton samples were collected for abundance analysis. Type C predominated in winter and autumn. Type I predominated in summer and Type N predominated in summer and autumn. Occurrence patterns were influenced by water temperature. Type C showed a negative correlation with water temperature. Type N was positively correlated with water temperature. However, Type I showed no significant correlation with water temperature. In 2013, genetic sampling using the mtCOI marker was conducted in winter and summer. Despite morphological differences, genetic analysis revealed intraspecific diversity due to seasonal environmental changes.

Zooplankton Abundance in Korean Waters (한국근해 동물성 부유생물의 주요군의 양적 분포)

  • Park, Joo-suck
    • 한국해양학회지
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    • v.8 no.1
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    • pp.33-45
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    • 1973
  • Plankton samples used for the present study were collected by the NORPAC net during the CSK cruises in the Korean waters in March and August, 1967. Regional and seasonal variations in the zooplankton biomass (wet weight, mg/㎥) were noticed in the Korean waters. In March the highest biomass, 130mg/㎥ on the average, occurred in the southern part of Japan Sea, but the lowest biomass of less than 50mg/㎥ occurred in the Yellow Sea and the western sea of Cheju Island Contrally, in August, the average biomass of 120mg/㎥ was measured in the Yellow Sea, the western sea of Cheju Island and the coastal waters of southern Korea, while the biomass of Japan Sea was the lowest of the regions surveyed. In comparison with the zooplankton biomass, total number of zooplankton per cubic meter of water strained also showed regional and seasonal fluctuations. In general, variations in the number of zooplankton specimens follows the same trend as in the biomass. The largest number, up to 800mg/㎥ on the average, occurred in the southern part of Japan Sea in March and the lowest number, less than 200mg/㎥ occurred in the Yellow Sea and the western sea of Cheju Island. In August, as shown by the biomass fluctuations, the largest number of zooplankton 850mg/㎥ on the average occurred in the Yellow Sea, the western sea of Cheju Island and the coastal region of southern Korea. But the lowest number of less than 500mg/㎥ was found in the Japan Sea. Among the various groups of zooplankton examined, the following were dominant components of the zooplankton population: Copepoda, Chaetognatha, Siphonophora, Euphausiacea, Cladocera, Appendicularia, and Amphipoda. The zooplankton conposition was significantly differed between the Japan Sea and Yellow Sea. Copepods which usually occupied over 66% in the Japan Sea and thd Korean Strait samples occupied only 42% of the catches in August, while cladocerans and chaetognaths were relatively abundant, i. e., 15 and 18% of the total organisms. The most dominant species of copepods and chaetognaths were Paracalanus parvus, Oithona similis, Acartia clausi, Calanus helgolandicus, Sagitta enflata, S. bedoti, S. elegans and S. crassa.

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