What is it about?
An organism's diet has wide-ranging consequences for their survival, but the diet of zooplankton such as lobster larvae is difficult to study because their stomachs are smaller than a pinhead. Using both microscopy and eDNA we showcase a mixed-methods approach to uncover the diet of these small creatures, and provide recommendations for future studies.
Featured Image
Photo by Braňo on Unsplash
Why is it important?
Small, numerous zooplankton are foundational in marine food-webs. Bottom dwelling species like lobsters and crabs spend only their earliest life stages among the zooplankton where they benefit from the bountiful food supply. Devising methods to study their diet reveals food-web linkages that impact growth and survival.
Perspectives
As new technology becomes available there can be a tendency to adopt a "new is always better" approach to science. With this article my coauthors and I demonstrate that traditional and cutting-edge techniques can complement each other for deeper insight. My hope is that our work helps others strengthen their own research, opening a window on previously obscure food-webs.
Alexander Ascher
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Developing the DNA sequencing methodologies was a major step in opening a window on the diet of larval lobster while preserving the value of visual inspection by microscopy. This approach is widely applicable to other species, whether marine or terrestrial..
Richard Wahle
University of Maine
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: Contemporary eDNA methods complement conventional microscopy in zooplankton diet studies: Case study with American lobster postlarvae, PLOS One, June 2025, PLOS,
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0325889.
You can read the full text:
Resources
Researchers Develop Tools for Unlocking Larval Lobster Diet
Press release from Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, one of the institutions which supported this work.
New methods complement old in revealing diet of larval lobsters
Press release from the University of Maine, one of the institutions which supported this work.
Bridging the spawner-recruit disconnect: trends in American lobster recruitment linked to the pelagic food web
A related publication
Increased temperature and acidification elevate the risk of starvation in American lobster larvae
A related publication
Larval ontogeny enhances resilience to a patchy planktonic food supply in the American lobster (Homarus americanus)
A related publication
Bridging the spawner-recruit disconnect II: Revealing basin-scale correlations between zooplankton and lobster settlement dynamics in the Gulf of Maine
A related publication
Diverging phenology of American lobster (Homarus americanus) larvae and their zooplankton prey in a warming ocean
A related publication
Contributors
The following have contributed to this page







