Copepods are a group of small crustaceans found in the sea and nearly every freshwater habitat and they constitute the biggest source of protein in the oceans. Many species are planktonic (drifting in sea waters), but more are benthic (living on the ocean floor), and some continental species may live in limno-terrestrial habitats and other wet terrestrial places, such as swamps, under leaf fall in wet forests, bogs, springs, ephemeral ponds and puddles, damp moss, or water-filled recesses (phytotelmata) of plants such as bromeliads and pitcher plants. Many live underground in marine and freshwater caves, sinkholes, or stream beds. Copepods are sometimes used as bioindicators (see particle (ecology)).
Ecology
Planktonic copepods are important to global
ecology and the
carbon cycle; They are usually the dominant members of the
zooplankton, and are major food organisms for small
fish,
whales,
seabirds and other
crustaceans such as
krill in the ocean and in fresh water. Some scientists say they form the largest animal
biomass on earth. They compete for this title with
Antarctic krill (
Euphausia superba). Because of their smaller size and relatively faster growth rates, however, and because they are more evenly distributed throughout more of the world's oceans, copepods almost certainly contribute far more to the
secondary productivity of the world's oceans, and to the global ocean
carbon sink than
krill, and perhaps than all other groups of organisms together. The surface layers of the oceans are currently believed to be the world's largest
carbon sink, absorbing about 2 billion tonnes of carbon a year, the equivalent to perhaps a third of
human carbon emissions, thus reducing their impact. Many
planktonic copepods feed near the surface at night, then sink into deeper water during the day to avoid visual predators. Their moulted
exoskeletons,
faecal pellets and
respiration at depth all bring
carbon to the deep sea.
Some copepods are
parasitic and have strongly modified bodies. They attach themselves to fish, sharks, marine mammals, and many kinds of invertebrates such as molluscs, tunicates, or corals. They live as endo- or ectoparasites on fish or invertebrates in fresh water as well as in marine environments.
Characteristics
Copepods are typically to long, with a teardrop shaped body and large
antennae. Although like other
crustaceans they have an armoured
exoskeleton, they are so small that in most species this armour, and the entire body, is almost totally transparent. Copepods have a single eye, usually bright red and in the centre of the transparent head. Some polar copepods reach . Most of the smaller copepods feed directly on
phytoplankton, catching cells singly, but a few of the larger species are predators of their smaller relatives. Herbivorous copepods, particularly those in rich cold seas, store up energy from their food as oil droplets while they feed in the spring and summer
plankton blooms. These droplets may take up over half of the volume of the body in polar species.
Many species have neurons surrounded by myelin, which is very rare among invertebrates (other examples are some annelids and malacostracan crustaceans like palaemonid shrimp and penaeids). Even rarer, the myelin is highly organized, resembling the well-organized wrapping found in vertebrates (Gnathostomata).
Some copepods are very evasive and can jump with extreme speed over a few millimeters (warning: takes some time to load to the correct speed):
This scene was scanned with the ecoSCOPE, an underwater high speed microscope. Very little is known about the details of these kinds of predator/prey interactions, in spite of their importance for global processes, because copepods are difficult to keep in the laboratory and lose most of their escape capacity, and herring are very fast, alert and evasive organisms and flee from normal camera systems or scuba divers.
Classification
Copepods form a
subclass belonging to the subphylum
Crustacea (crustaceans). Some authors consider the copepods to be a full
class. The group contains ten
orders with some 14,000 described
species. A scientist that studies copepods is a
copepodologist. they are sexxxxxyy
Water supply
Copepods are sometimes found in the public mains water supply, especially systems where the water is not filtered, such as
New York City and
Boston, Massachusetts. This is not usually a problem in treated water supplies. In some tropical countries, such as
Peru and
Bangladesh, a correlation has been found between copepods and
cholera in untreated water, because the cholera bacteria attach to the surfaces of planktonic animals. The risk of cholera from infected water can be reduced by filtering out the copepods (and other matter), for example with a
cloth filter.
Copepods have been used successfully in
Vietnam to control disease-bearing
mosquitoes such as
Aedes aegypti that transmit
dengue fever and other human
parasitic diseases. The copepods can be added to water-storage containers where the mosquitoes breed. Copepods, primarily of the genera
Mesocyclops and
Macrocyclops, can survive for periods of months in the containers, if the containers are not completely drained by their users. They will attack, kill, and eat the younger 1st and 2nd
instar larvae of the mosquitoes. This
biological control method is complemented by community trash removal and recycling to eliminate other possible mosquito-breeding sites. Because the water in these containers is drawn from uncontaminated sources such as rainfall, there is little risk of contamination by cholera bacteria, and in fact no cases of cholera have been linked to copepods introduced into water-storage containers. Trials using copepods to control container-breeding mosquitoes are underway in several other countries, including
Thailand and the southern
U.S.A.
References
External links
See also