Everything about Salp totally explained
A
salp is a barrel-shaped, free-floating
tunicate. It moves by contracting, thus pumping water through its gelatinous body. The salp strains the pumped water and feeds on
phytoplankton.
Distribution
Salps are common in
equatorial seas, where they float on their faces, alone or in long, stringy
colonies. The most abundant concentrations of salps are in the
Southern Ocean. Here they sometimes form enormous swarms, often in deep water, and are sometimes even more abundant than
krill. In the last century, while krill populations in the Southern Ocean declined, salp populations appear to be increasing.
One reason for the success of salps is how they respond to
phytoplankton blooms. When there's plenty of food, salps can quickly bud off
clones, which graze the phytoplankton and can grow at a rate which is probably faster than any other
multicellular animal, quickly stripping the phytoplankton from the sea. But if the phytoplankton is too dense, the salps can clog and sink to the bottom. During these blooms, beaches can become slimy with mats of salp bodies, and other
planktonic species can experience fluctuations in their numbers due to competition with the salps.
Sinking
fecal pellets and bodies of salps carry
carbon to the sea floor, and salps are abundant enough to have an impact on the ocean's
biological pump. Consequently, large changes in their abundance or distribution may alter the ocean's
carbon cycle, and potentially play a role in
climate change.
Nervous systems and relationships
Salps are related to
doliolida and
pyrosoma.
Although salps appear similar to
jellyfish because of the simple form of their bodies and their free-floating way of life, they're structurally most closely related to
vertebrates, animals with true
backbones.
Salps appear to have a form preliminary to vertebrates, and are used as a starting point in models of how vertebrates evolved. Scientists speculate that the tiny groups of nerves in salps are one of the first instances of a primitive
nervous system, which eventually evolved into the more complex
central nervous systems of vertebrates.
Studies on salp brains have been done by Thurston Lacalli and Linda Z. Holland and published in
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London.
Classification
Further Information
Get more info on 'Salp'.
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