The dominant zooplankton of the La Mancha lagoon, Veracruz, Mexico, was analyzed with the objective of evaluating its seasonal and diel variability, as well as the influence of the main environmental variables on this variability. From May 2012 to April 2013, every month a 24-h cycle was completed, taking samples every 4 h, at the mouth of the lagoon. Simultaneously with zooplankton sampling, in situ environmental parameters such as temperature, dissolved oxygen, salinity, chlorophyll a and number of phytoplankton cells were recorded. We collected 54 taxa (mainly holoplankton) and 10 of them were considered dominant (total abundance > 0.5%). The zooplankton community was dominated mainly by two species of copepods (Acartia tonsa and Pseudodiaptomus pelagicus), as well as zoea larvae of brachyura (~85%). At seasonal level, the total abundance of zooplankton showed significant pulses throughout the year, one in February-March dominated by copepods and another in September-October, dominated by decapod larvae. On a diel scale, although total zooplankton abundance was significantly higher at night, only P. pelagicus, amphipods, megalopae, and other decapod larvae showed significant differences at this level. According to a Canonical Correspondence Analysis, the mouth stage (open/close), the number of cyanophytes and precipitation were the most important environmental factors in determining the abundance of the dominant zooplankton.
A female of the monstrilloid copepod species Cymbasoma tumorifrons (Isaac, 1975), previously known only from the Aegean Sea, was recorded in a bay of the Mexican tropical Pacific. The female of this rare species has not been recorded since its description more than 25 yr ago. To complement the brief original description, an expanded description and illustrations of this species are presented here based mainly on the Mexican specimen but considering also type material. Standards recently set for description of monstrilloid copepods were followed. Several characters such as chaetotaxy of legs 1-4, details of the antennular armature, cuticular ornamentation, and the fifth legs were overlooked in the original diagnosis and are described and analyzed here. This record supports an important range extension of the known distribution of this species from the Mediterranean Sea to the Mexican Pacific. It represents only the fourth record of a Cymbasoma species in the eastern Pacific.
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