Introduction
Plankton, collective term for a variety of marine and
freshwater organisms that drift on or near the surface of the water.
Behavior
Their movement depends largely on tides, currents, and
winds, because they are too small or weak to swim against the currents.
Varieties
That component of the plankton comprising bacteria and
microscopic algae and fungi is called the phytoplankton. Important algal
groups in the phytoplankton include diatoms, golden algae, green algae,
and cyanobacteria (formerly known as blue-green algae). The other component
of the plankton, the zooplankton, comprises protozoa and small crustaceans,
jellyfish, worms, and mollusks, together with the eggs and larvae of the
many animal species inhabiting marine and fresh waters. Important protozoan
groups in the zooplankton are dinoflagellates and foraminifera.
Density
The density of plankton varies, depending on the availability
of nutrients and the stability of the water. A liter of lake water may
contain more than 500 million planktonic organisms. Marine plankton occasionally
becomes so numerous that the organisms color the water; such sudden population
increases are called tides.
Phenomenon
The so-called red tides are caused by billions of dinoflagellates
of various species; such tides are sometimes dangerous, because they can
poison both humans and fish. Red tides have occurred off the west coast
of Florida and in the coastal waters of New England, southern California,
Texas, Peru, eastern Australia, Chile, and Japan. In 1946 such a tide killed
fish, turtles, oysters, and other marine organisms in the Gulf of Mexico
near Fort Myers, Florida. The blue-green alga Trichodesmus sometimes, in
dying off, imparts a reddish color to water; the Red Sea is so named because
of this.
Lifestyle
An estimated 90 percent of all photosynthesis and release
of free oxygen takes place in the oceans. Marine phytoplankton is the first
link in the vast aquatic food chain.
Predator
The zooplankton, which feeds on the phytoplankton, is
consumed in turn by larger animals such as fish and even by the largest
mammal, the blue whale. The high protein content of plankton has stimulated
research on it as a potential food source for humans.