Plankton and El Nino

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deleted-160001
Posts: 51
Joined: Tue Oct 08, 2013 10:21 pm
Occupation: Student: 11th grade
Project Question: How do the warmer conditions that accompany El Niño affect the biodiversity of plankton species of the West Coast?
Project Due Date: March 3rd, 2014
Project Status: I am conducting my research

Plankton and El Nino

Post by deleted-160001 »

Hi,

I'm going to be investigating the effect of warmer climate (El Nino) has on the biodiversity of the plankton population. I need to get samples to do plankton counts, but was wondering what is the best method of doing so. I was initially thinking of using a plankton tow net, but then I read that a lot of the smaller species could pass through even the finest nets, so is there a more efficient way, or do you think that for the purpose of this project the net will be ok? Thanks!
deleted-132180
Former Expert
Posts: 302
Joined: Thu Apr 04, 2013 12:27 pm
Occupation: Graduate Student
Project Question: I am volunteering for the "Ask an Expert" program.
Project Due Date: I am volunteering for the "Ask an Expert" program.
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Re: Plankton and El Nino

Post by deleted-132180 »

Hello there,

If you haven't seen this already, Science Buddies has a project called "Primary Productivity and Plankton" (or is this the project you were planning on doing)? There, you will see instructions on how to build a net to collect plankton samples.

Here is the link: https://www.sciencebuddies.org/science- ... ml#summary.

Let us know if you have anymore questions!

Connie
caraskl
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Re: Plankton and El Nino

Post by caraskl »

To collect plankton, you could use a fine mesh net; this is the most common method. Other collection devices you can use is a Schindler-Patalas trap, which is good for catching zooplankton. If you want to catch small zooplankton, you can collect whole water samples using devices such as a Van dorn bottle or long tubes made with PVC. Afterwards, the water sample is sieved through a fine mesh.
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