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A Contribution to the Quantitative Study of Plankton

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

E. J. Allen
Affiliation:
Director of the Plymouth Laboratory.

Extract

The well-known work of Hensen (1887) was the first serious attempt to determine the actual number of individual plankton organisms in sea-water. Hensen's method consisted in straining a vertical column of water through a net of fine-meshed bolting silk having 6,000 to 6,500 meshes per square centimetre, the average length of the side of a mesh being 50 µ. A carefully measured sample of the organisms retained by the net was taken and the number of organisms in it counted. From this, since the area of the mouth of the net and the distance through which it was drawn were known, the number of organisms in a unit volume (1 litre) of water could be calculated, with the help of a coefficient of filtration for the particular pattern of net employed, which was determined experimentally. Many small organisms, however, escaped through the meshes of the net, and Lohmann (1902, 1908) made a special study of these by filtering through hard filter paper or closely woven taffeta silk, by an examination of the filtering apparatus in the “houses” of Appendicularians, and finally, for the quantitative estimation of the smallest organisms of all, by subjecting samples of sea-water to the action of a centrifuge making 1,400 revolutions per minute for a period of 7 minutes. The use of the centrifuge has been continued by Gran (1915) and by Lebour (1917). For the full literature of the subject the reader is referred to Gran (1915) and Lohmann (1911). In the course of my work on the cultivation of plankton diatoms (1910, 1911) I became convinced that even the quantitative method based on the use of the centrifuge fell very far short of giving the total number of organisms actually present in a sample of sea-water, and the results recorded in the present paper show that this is certainly the case.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1919

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References

Literature

1910. Allen, E. J., and Nelson, E. W.On the Artificial Culture of Marine Plankton Organisms. Jour. Mar. Biol. Assoc., Vol. VIII, p. 421. (Also in Quart. Jour. Micr. Sci., Vol. LV, p. 361.)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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