6533b85bfe1ef96bd12bbdc2

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Effect of the abundance of three predominating copepod species on adequate sample volume and sample size in Bransfield Strait (Antarctic Peninsula) and waters north of the Weddell Sea

Ilppo VuorinenErik Bonsdorff

subject

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologySampling (statistics)biology.organism_classificationZooplanktonCrustaceanSample volumeOceanographyAbundance (ecology)Sample size determinationPeninsulaGeneral Agricultural and Biological SciencesCopepod

description

The effect on adequate sample size and sample volume of the abundances of three predominant copepod species, Metridia gerlachei, Calanus propinquus and Calanoides acutus, were studied in Bransfield Strait (Antarctic Peninsula) in the austral summer of 1988–1989 and waters north of the Weddell Sea in 1989–1990. Copepod abundances were higher in the area north of the Weddell Sea, with the exception of Metridia gerlachei, which was evenly distributed over both areas. Local (intra-station) patchiness was not found, indicating random distribution over small areas. In the assessment of inter-station variability in Bransfield Strait, with standard error of the mean set arbitrarily at 20% of the average abundance and a sampling volume of 150 m3, the theoretical minimum sample size (number of sampling stations) ranged from 6 to 17 for juvenile copepods and from 11 to 25 for adults. The minimum number of stations in the area north of the Weddell Sea reached from 5 to 7, and from 7 to 10 respectively.

https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00236992