7:00
Peek Into Zooplankton Life 2008
Peek Into Zooplankton Life 2008
This film shows variety of zooplankton behaviors which you cannot see your naked eyes.
1:33
Zooplankton Slide Show
Zooplankton Slide Show
This is a collection of microscopic photographs taken of zooplankton species commonly found in North American reservoirs. For more information or additional photographs visit: www.bsaenv.com/aquatics BSA Environmental Services, Inc. www.bsaenv.com John Beaver, Ph.D. j.beaver@bsaenv.com
6:39
Dave Talks Science, Episode 1 - Nightlighting Zooplankton
Dave Talks Science, Episode 1 - Nightlighting Zooplankton
Created as my final project for the ScienceFilm class hosted at Friday Harbor Labs, this is a short film about the marine zooplankton (and various other organisms) that are attracted to bright lights dipped in the water at night, and why. It was a great experience. More info on the ScienceFilm classes are found here: www.sciencefilm.org Many thanks to ScienceFilm instructors Jeff Morales and Colin Bates, Hillary Hayford at Friday Harbor Labs, and all the students and faculty that helped that week! Who knows, maybe there will be more "Dave Talks Science" episodes, if I have time...
4:44
Ocean Productivity - Zooplankton & Primary Productivity
Ocean Productivity - Zooplankton & Primary Productivity
In this segment, we briefly explore the role of zooplankton as consumers of and contributors to primary production.
4:14
Antarctic Zooplankton Science @ VIMS
Antarctic Zooplankton Science @ VIMS
Professor Deborah Steinberg of the Virginia Institute of Marine Science, College of William and Mary, leads the zooplankton-study component of the Palmer Long-Term Ecological Research Program at the US Palmer Research Station on the western edge of the Antarctic Peninsula.
4:45
Night fishing lights:Submerged Lighting Is It Needed?
Night fishing lights:Submerged Lighting Is It Needed?
www.oldfishinghole.com Night fishing lights amazing secret tells why they work so well... Also get your free download of bass and crappie fishing secret special report here!
0:40
Plankton bloom in Puget Sound (zooplankton Noctiluca)
Plankton bloom in Puget Sound (zooplankton Noctiluca)
This video taken by scientists of the Department of Ecologys marine monitoring program shows a bloom of tiny zooplankton called Noctiluca which is common in Puget Sound. The scientists captured these images at Puget Sounds Discovery Bay in July 2008.
2:41
Live Bait: Article # 14 Amazing Results Of The Game Fish Foo
Live Bait: Article # 14 Amazing Results Of The Game Fish Foo
Check Out The Game Fish Food Chain So You Can Select Your Next Live Bait! Click Here! Visit Our Website And Get Your Free Fishing Downloads Today!
5:01
DNA Barcoding of the North Sea Zooplankton - WCMB 2011.mpg
DNA Barcoding of the North Sea Zooplankton - WCMB 2011.mpg
Marine zooplankton populations represent excellent "model organisms" for monitoring aquatic ecosystems. In order to understand shifts in the North Sea zooplankton community, a valid species identification is indispensable. To investigate the effectiveness of the COI gene to provide species-level identification for a wide variety of zooplankton taxa, with a special emphasis on meroplankton, we sequenced COI from 173 zooplankton specimens. The establishment of a sequence library of morphologically identified adult species combined with larval stages that hampers traditional morphological identification, provides a valuable tool ideally suited to studying the biodiversity of the metazoan fauna of the North Sea through a barcoding approach. This is a digital object contribution to the World Conference on Marine Biodiversity in Aberdeen, Scotland in 2011. MOHRBECK, I., MARTÍNEZ ARBIZU, P., RAUPACH, MJ, LAAKMANN S. (2011)
0:31
Zooplankton 3D Rendering
Zooplankton 3D Rendering
A working 3D model of a Zooplankton that will be part of the interactive Biosphere on the One Ocean website. www.oneoceanonline.org
3:07
Zooplankton DyMiCo.m2v
Zooplankton DyMiCo.m2v
DyMiCo (Dynamic Mineral Control) is a filtration technology developed by EcoDeco BV, and it designed to remove nitrate from aquarium water whilst preserving its plankton population. This video show several zooplankters that were removed from an aquarium system running on DyMiCo technology for about 8 weeks. Several zooplankers per liter could be observed, of which most were adult copepods, copepod nauplii and ephyra larvae (possibly from strobilating Cladonema polyps) of various sizes.
0:50
Euchlanis triquetra (Zooplankton, Rotifer)
Euchlanis triquetra (Zooplankton, Rotifer)
Euchlanis triquetra collected from Lake Kelso, a kettle lake located in Geauga County, OH.
0:33
Zooplankton Prey
Zooplankton Prey
Zooxanthellae provide their coral hosts with a proportion of their required energy (Barnes & Hughes, 1999). As well as gaining energy from their symbiotic zooxanthellae, many corals feed at night by consuming zooplankton prey (Barnes 1987, Sebens et al. 1996, Ferrier-Pages et al. 2003). By extending their tentacles equipped with stinging nematocyst cells, corals are able to capture the zooplankton in the water column. The trapped prey is then transported to the centre of the polyps' oral disk and ingested through the gastrovascular cavity. In addition to capturing zooplankton, many corals also collect fine particles in mucus film or strands covering their surface. The mucus and trapped particles are then transported to the mouth by the cilia at the coral tissue surface (Barnes & Hughes, 1999). In this video, corals are using their nematocyst-laden tentacles to capture food particles from the water column, drawing them towards the mouth for ingestion. Credits Cinematography: Neilan Kuntz Edited by: Neilan Kuntz Written by: Neilan Kuntz Location: Bocas del Toro, Panama (2003) Barnes, R. (1987) Invertebrate Zoology. 5th Edition. Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc. pp. 149-163. Barnes, R., R. Hughes (1999). An Introduction to Marine Ecology. 3rd Edition. Malden, MA: Blackwell Science, Inc. pp. 117-141. Ferrier-Pagés, J. Witting, E. Tambutté, KP Sebens (2003) Effect of natural zooplankton feeding on the tissue and skeletal growth of the scleractinian coral <b>...</b>
6:22
Catfish Fishing Weapon Zooplankton Article
Catfish Fishing Weapon Zooplankton Article
www.oldfishinghole.com Revealed: Natures Little-Known Scientific Secret Small Groups Of Elite Fishermen Around The World Use To Easily Bring In At Least 10 Times More Catfish (And Other Game Fish) Than Anybody Else
0:38
Zooplankton Killed My Bullfrog Tadpole! :(
Zooplankton Killed My Bullfrog Tadpole! :(
***Anyone know how to kill and or prevent zooplankton?*** These things just appeared in the tank and now they killed my tadpole!
0:47
Ostracods, zooplankton in jar from pond
Ostracods, zooplankton in jar from pond
Some ostracods eats dead worm. I made this ecosphere out of pond water that I filed the jar with. The whole action took place one month after the ecosphere was made.
2:36
(Subtitled) Zooplankton Research and the VENUS Lab
(Subtitled) Zooplankton Research and the VENUS Lab
The VENUS undersea laboratory, off the coast of British Columbia, is enabling scientists to study zooplankton—the oceans smallest animals. Underwater monitoring instruments and cameras continuously record their daily migrations from ocean floor to surface, and transmit the data in real time to onshore labs. This ongoing data stream can help researchers understand the impacts of pollution, shifting levels of carbon dioxide, and climate change on the largest food source in the ocean. nature.ca