Plankton
organisms that are in the water column and are incapable of swimming against current
Plankton are those aquatic living organisms that float and lack the ability to swim against significant currents in large bodies of water. The term was introduced by the German zoologist Victor Hensen (1835–1924).
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Quotes
edit- Oceanic phytoplankton seems generally to be associated with low biodiversity, and phytoplankton biodiversity does not correlate with zooplankton biodiversity ...
- Michael D. Guiry: (2012). "How many species of algae are there?". Journal of Phycology 48 (5): 1057–1063. ISSN 00223646. DOI:10.1111/j.1529-8817.2012.01222.x. (quote from pp. 1060–1061)
- The inability to control horizontal position or to swim against significant currents in open waters separates 'plankton' from the 'nekton' of active swimmers, which include adult fish, large cephalopods, aquatic reptiles, birds and mammals.
In this way, plankton comprises organisms that range in size from that of viruses (a few tens of nanometres) to those of large jellyfish (a metre or more). Representative organisms include bacteria, protistans, fungi and metazoans.- C. S. Reynolds: The Ecology of Phytoplankton. Cambridge University Press. 4 May 2006. ISBN 978-1-139-45489-6. (quote from pp. 1–2)
- Phytoplankton and zooplankton — tiny drifting plants and animals — are vital components of the marine and freshwater aquatic food chains, and our waterways. Plankton communities reflect the effects of water quality and cannot isolate themselves as oysters do by closing their shells in adverse conditions. Plankton are effectilvely our aquatic 'canaries-in-a-cage' — they accumulate over days the effects of hourly changes in water quality.
- David Rissik and Iain M. Suthers: "Chapter 1. The importance of plankton". Plankton: A Guide to Their Ecology and Monitoring for Water Quality. eds. Suthers, I. M.; Rissik, D.; Csiro Publishing. 2009. ISBN 978-0-643-09058-3. (quote from p. 1)