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You are here: Home / Digital library / CRUSTACEA / MALACOSTRACA / Mysida and Lophogastrida / Biblio / Effects of season on the bathypelagic mysid Gnathophausia ingens: water content, respiration, and excretion

Page Hiller-Adams and James J Childress (1983)

Effects of season on the bathypelagic mysid Gnathophausia ingens: water content, respiration, and excretion

Deep Sea Research Part A. Oceanographic Research Papers, 30(6):629-638.

Water contents, oxygen consumption rates and ammonia excretion rates of individuals of the large bathypelagic mysid Gnathophausia ingens were measured as a function of size and season (winter and summer). Individuals of the sizes studied live permanently beneath the euphotic zone. Water content, as a percent of wet weight, is higher in winter than in summer, suggesting seasonal variability in the midwater environment. Our data suggest that the seasonal change in water content increases with increasing size. We suggest that the changes are due in part to seasonal changes in food intake. Seasonal differences were not observed in wet-weight-specific rates of either respiration or ammonia excretion. Both rates decrease with increasing size. The constancy of the atomic O:N ratio and its high value (geometric mean = 44.3) indicate that the average proportions of lipid and protein metabolized by individuals were independent of size and season and that lipid stores were not sufficiently depleted, even in small animals, to cause a shift to predominantly protein metabolism in winter or summer. On the average, metabolic rates of individuals were unaffected by seasonal variation in the midwater environment.

  • DOI: 10.1016/0198-0149(83)90040-7
  • ISSN: 0198-0149