Journal of Tropical Oceanography ›› 2023, Vol. 42 ›› Issue (5): 178-193.doi: 10.11978/2022239CSTR: 32234.14.2022239

• Review • Previous Articles    

Swarms of pelagic gelatinous tunicates and their roles in marine biological carbon pump*

TAN Yehui1,2(), LAI Yanjiao1,2, LIAN Xiping1,2, LIU Jiaxing1, KE Zhixin1,2, LI Kaizhi1,2   

  1. 1. CAS Key Laboratory of Tropical Marine Bio-resources and Ecology, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Applied Marine Biology, South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 510301, China
    2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
  • Received:2022-11-08 Revised:2022-11-27 Online:2023-09-10 Published:2023-02-13
  • Supported by:
    National Natural Science Foundation of China(31971432); National Natural Science Foundation of China(41976112); National Natural Science Foundation of China(32171548)

Abstract:

Mucus-feeding pelagic tunicates are widely distributed in the open ocean and coastal waters, which have very high rates of reproduction, and the ability to form massive blooms. In this review, we provide a qualitative overview of the combination of high particle consumption and swarms of pelagic tunicates led to accumulate at the ocean floor as jelly-POM (particulate organic matter), substantial contributions to vertical export fluxes. As well as the swarms in relation to environmental drivers and unique life-history adaptation, its role in pelagic-benthic coupling, structure and energy flow of marine food web by selecting feeding are reviewed. Because pelagic tunicates have high filtering rates and efficiencies and can reach great abundances, they have the potential to remove a significant fraction of shelf water column primary production, are exported via mucous aggregates, fecal pellets, and jelly falls sinking to depth or restructure shelf pelagic food webs. The study of jelly-falls represents a major challenge in the understanding of the biological pump mainly due to technical/sampling hurdles, the ecological significance of pelagic tunicate blooms, for instance, the rate of this downward carbon flux may be further enhanced through in-situ observations on pelagic tunicates’ diel vertical migrations together with quantitative net catches. Future work should pay more attention to the coupling between fine scales of hydrodynamic grazing and breeding rates under in situ conditions, and link bloom impact on carbon cycling to more dimensions of the physical, chemical, and biological ocean environment, in order to more accurately assess the efficiency of the jelly carbon pump and its response to global change.

Key words: pelagic tunicates, swarms or aggregations, jelly-carbon pump, food web