National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark, Kavalergården 6, Charlottenlund, Denmark.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2011 May;86(2):311-39. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-185X.2010.00148.x.
Zooplankton is a morphologically and taxonomically diverse group and includes organisms that vary in size by many orders of magnitude, but they are all faced with the common problem of collecting food from a very dilute suspension. In order to maintain a viable population in the face of mortality, zooplankton in the ocean have to clear daily a volume of ambient water for prey particles that is equivalent to about 10(6) times their own body volume. While most size-specific vital rates and mortality rates decline with size, the clearance requirement is largely size-independent because food availability also declines with size. There is a limited number of solutions to the problem of concentrating dilute prey from a sticky medium: passive and active ambush feeding; feeding-current feeding, where the prey is either intercepted directly, retained on a filter, or individually perceived and extracted from the feeding current; cruise feeding; and colonization of large particles and marine snow aggregates. The basic mechanics of these food-collection mechanisms are described, and it is shown that their efficiencies are inherently different and that each of these mechanisms becomes less efficient with increasing size. Mechanisms that compensate for this decline in efficiency are described, including inflation of feeding structures and development of vision. Each feeding mode has implications beyond feeding in terms of risk of encountering predators and chance of meeting mates, and they partly target different types of prey. The main dichotomy is between (inefficient) ambush feeding on motile prey and the more efficient active feeding modes; a secondary dichotomy is between (efficient) hovering and (less efficient) cruising feeding modes. The efficiencies of the various feeding modes are traded off against feeding-mode-dependent metabolic expenses, predation risks, and mating chances. The optimality of feeding strategies, evaluated as the ratio of gain over risk, varies with the environment, and may explain both size-dependent and spatio-temporal differences in distributions of various feeding types as well as other aspects of the biology of zooplankton (mating behaviour, predator defence strategies).
浮游动物是一个形态和分类上多样化的群体,包括大小差异很大的生物,但它们都面临着从非常稀释的悬浮液中收集食物的共同问题。为了在死亡率面前维持一个可行的种群,海洋浮游动物每天必须清除相当于其自身体积 10^6 倍的环境水体积的猎物颗粒。虽然大多数特定大小的关键生活率和死亡率随大小而下降,但清除要求在很大程度上与大小无关,因为食物供应也随大小而下降。从粘性介质中浓缩稀释猎物有几种有限的解决方案:被动和主动伏击觅食;进食流觅食,其中猎物直接被拦截、被过滤器截留或从进食流中单独感知和提取;巡游觅食;以及对大颗粒和海洋雪聚集物的殖民化。描述了这些食物收集机制的基本力学,并且表明它们的效率本质上是不同的,并且随着尺寸的增加,每种机制的效率都会降低。描述了补偿这种效率下降的机制,包括进食结构的膨胀和视觉的发展。每种进食方式除了在遇到捕食者的风险和遇到配偶的机会方面具有意义之外,还部分针对不同类型的猎物。主要的二分法是在运动猎物的低效(低效)伏击觅食和更有效的主动觅食模式之间;次要二分法是在(高效)悬停和(低效)巡游觅食模式之间。各种进食模式的效率是根据与进食模式相关的代谢费用、捕食风险和交配机会来权衡的。进食策略的最优性,作为收益与风险的比值进行评估,随着环境的变化而变化,并且可以解释各种进食类型的分布以及浮游动物生物学的其他方面(交配行为、捕食者防御策略)的大小依赖性和时空差异。