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Zooplankton selectivity and nutritional value of phytoplankton influences a rich variety of dynamics in a plankton population model.

Physical Review. E 2019 January
Mathematical modeling may be an excellent tool to analyze and explain complex biological phenomena. In this paper, we use a mathematical model to reveal various interesting dynamical features of phytoplankton-zooplankton interaction and attempt to explain the reason for contrasting dynamics shown by different laboratory and field experiments. Our study shows that the phytoplankton-zooplankton interaction in a pelagic system is very complex and the plankton dynamics, including the bloom phenomenon, strongly depends on the selective predation of zooplankton and the nutritional value of phytoplankton. The study supports the existing hypothesis that decoupling at the plant-animal interface may occur due to strong fish predation on zooplankton. In addition, we argue that decoupling of the food chain may also occur under low to intermediate nutrient inflow if zooplankton feeds on phytoplankton having lower nutritional value. It is also shown that nutrient enrichment can destabilize an otherwise stable system if zooplankton feeds on highly nutritious prey, but unable to destabilize the system if zooplankton feeds on low-nutritious prey. This may be one possible explanation to the longstanding question: Why do some experiments show the paradox of enrichment and others do not?

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