Annual Cycle of the Mesozooplankton in Oligotrophic Waters off Tenerife (Canary Islands, Spain)
Marco Anglano, Genuario Belmonte, Enrique Isla, Juan Usó-Canós, Sergio RossiMesozooplankton were studied monthly (September 2023–August 2024, 12 months) at two coastal stations, at 35 and 90 m water depth, off Punta Blanca, SW Tenerife, Canary archipelago. Sample collection involved 250 and 500 μm bongo nets. This research focused on improving the description of plankton biodiversity and dynamics of the Canary archipelago (Macaronesia area), including its role in the transport of particulate carbon. A total of 156 taxa were identified. Copepoda dominated with 85 taxa, including 72 Calanoida species. They were numerically followed by Appendicularia, Chaetognatha, and Hydrozoa. Mesh sizes varied in collection efficiency, but with a similar pattern during the annual cycle: abundance peaks in early autumn (October–November) and late winter–spring (February–April). The 35 m depth station showed 57 to 3809 ind. m−3 (250 μm mesh size) and 10 to 1577 ind. m−3 (500 μm). The 90 m depth station showed 22 to 402 ind. m−3 (250 μm) and 11 to 170 ind. m−3 (500 μm). The present study enhances our understanding of Macaronesia’s mesozooplankton dynamics related to environmental variability, which is crucial for energy transfer assessments in pelagic food webs. It reports new species for the study area, Labidocera acutifrons (Dana, 1849–1852) and Undinula vulgaris (Dana, 1849–1852), highlighting the need for consistent zooplankton monitoring to properly inform conservation and sustainable management actions in the region.