About: Salp is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 161 publications have been published within this topic receiving 5483 citations. The topic is also known as: the salp family.
TL;DR: Data from 1995 and 1996 are provided that support hypothesized relationships between krill, salps and region-wide sea-ice conditions and suggest that decreased krill availability may affect the levels of their vertebrate predators.
Abstract: Krill (Euphausia superba) provide a direct link between primary producers and higher trophic levels in the Antarctic marine food web1,2,3,4,5,6. The pelagic tunicate Salpa thompsoni can also be important during spring and summer through the formation of extensive and dense blooms6,7,8,9. Although salps are not a major dietary item for Antarctic vertebrate predators7,10, their blooms can affect adult krill reproduction and survival of krill larvae. Here we provide data from 1995 and 1996 that support hypothesized relationships between krill, salps and region-wide sea-ice conditions11,12. We have assessed salp consumption as a proportion of net primary production, and found correlations between herbivore densities and integrated chlorophyll-a that indicate that there is a degree of competition between krill and salps. Our analysis of the relationship between annual sea-ice cover and a longer time series of air temperature measurements12,13 indicates a decreased frequency of winters with extensive sea-ice development over the last five decades. Our data suggest that decreased krill availability may affect the levels of their vertebrate predators. Regional warming and reduced krill abundance therefore affect the marine food web and krill resource management.
TL;DR: The high Antarctic regions, particularly the Marginal Ice Zone, have effective physiological mechanisms that may provide protection against the salp invasion, and salps may become a more prominent player in the trophic structure of the Antarctic marine ecosystem.
Abstract: Available data on the spatial distribution and feeding ecophysiology of Antarctic krill, Euphausia superba, and the tunicate, Salpa thompsoni, in the Southern Ocean are summarized in this study. Antarctic krill and salps generally display pronounced spatial segregation at all spatial scales. This appears to be the result of a clear biotopical separation of these key species in the Antarctic pelagic food web. Krill and salps are found in different water masses or water mass modifications, which are separated by primary or secondary frontal features. On the small-scale (o100 km), Antarctic krill and salps are usually restricted to the specific water parcels, or are well segregated vertically. Krill and salp grazing rates estimated using the in situ gut fluorescence technique are among the highest recorded in the Antarctic pelagic food web. Although krill and salps at times may remove the entire daily primary production, generally their grazing impact is moderate (p50% of primary production). The regional ecological consequences of years of high salp densities may be dramatic. If the warming trend, which is observed around the Antarctic Peninsula and in the Southern Ocean, continues, salps may become a more prominent player in the trophic structure of the Antarctic marine ecosystem. This likely would be coupled with a dramatic decrease in krill productivity, because of a parallel decrease in the spatial extension of the krill biotope. The high Antarctic regions, particularly the Marginal Ice Zone, have, however, effective physiological mechanisms that may provide protection against the salp invasion. r 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
TL;DR: An updated version of KRILLBASE is provided that contains data from 15 194 net hauls, including 12 758 with krill abundance data and 9726 with salp abundance data, and illustrates the seasonal, inter-annual, regional and depth coverage of sampling, and provides both circumpolar- and regional-scale distribution maps.
Abstract: Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) and salps are major macroplankton contributors to Southern Ocean food webs and krill are also fished commercially. Managing this fishery sustainably, against a backdrop of rapid regional climate change, requires information on distribution and time trends. Many data on the abundance of both taxa have been obtained from net sampling surveys since 1926, but much of this is stored in national archives, sometimes only in notebooks. In order to make these important data accessible we have collated available abundance data (numerical density, no. m−2) of postlarval E. superba and salp individual (multiple species, and whether singly or in chains). These were combined into a central database, KRILLBASE, together with environmental information, standardisation and metadata. The aim is to provide a temporal-spatial data resource to support a variety of research such as biogeochemistry, autecology, higher predator foraging and food web modelling in addition to fisheries management and conservation. Previous versions of KRILLBASE have led to a series of papers since 2004 which illustrate some of the potential uses of this database. With increasing numbers of requests for these data we here provide an updated version of KRILLBASE that contains data from 15 194 net hauls, including 12 758 with krill abundance data and 9726 with salp abundance data. These data were collected by 10 nations and span 56 seasons in two epochs (1926–1939 and 1976–2016). Here, we illustrate the seasonal, inter-annual, regional and depth coverage of sampling, and provide both circumpolar- and regional-scale distribution maps. Krill abundance data have been standardised to accommodate variation in sampling methods, and we have presented these as well as the raw data. Information is provided on how to screen, interpret and use KRILLBASE to reduce artefacts in interpretation, with contact points for the main data providers.
TL;DR: The marine pelagic tunicate Thalia democratica has one of the fastest individual growth rates and shortest generation times of any multicellular animal.
Abstract: The marine pelagic tunicate Thalia democratica has one of the fastest individual growth rates and shortest generation times of any multicellular animal. Measurements of growth in the laboratory and at sea show that this salp maintains a growth rate of over ten percent in length per hour for much of its life cycle. This salp develops through bot generations in a minimum of two days. This generation time increases to over two weeks under conditions of poorer food or lower temperature. Maternal nutrition and viviparity are among the many specialized adaptations which allow this animal to achieve such rapid growth.
TL;DR: All extracts of root and flower of M. oleifera were found to have antihepatotoxic activity and liver function was assessed based on liver to body weight ratio, serum levels of transaminase, alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin.
Abstract: Aqueous and alcoholic extracts of root and flower of M. oleifera were screened for antihepatotoxic activity in paracetamol treated albino rats. Liver function was assessed based on liver to body weight ratio, serum levels of transaminase (SGPT, SGOT), alkaline phosphatase (SALP) and bilirubin. All extracts were found to have antihepatotoxic activity.