1. Introduction
Representatives of zooplankton occupy a key position in the aquatic food web and play a major role in energy transfer to macroinvertebrates or fish [
1]. In particular, planktonic animals of the Caspian Sea are an important link in the ecosystem of the sea and are included in the diet requirements of benthic animals [
1]. Sturgeons of the Caspian Sea are benthivorous [
2], with about 90% of the world’s sturgeon catch currently being carried out in the Caspian Sea [
3]. Furthermore, the Caspian Sea is a hotspot of biological diversity [
3,
4,
5,
6]. Biodiversity conservation is an important direction of life science, and its significance has formed the basis of many international documents, including the Convention on Biological Diversity [
7]. Therefore, the study of zooplankton assemblages in the Caspian Sea is topical and has brought and continues to bring new results regarding both species and taxocenosis levels during the last centuries [
8]; an inevitable process attributed to the introduction of non-indigenous predatory species and increased anthropogenic pressure.
The studies of zooplankton in the Caspian Sea began at the end of the 19th century [
9,
10]. According to the literature data, zooplankton of the Caspian Sea was previously represented by 74 marine and brackish-water species, including 32 rotifers, 24 cladocerans, and 18 copepods [
11,
12], and taking into account the freshwater forms that inhabit in the near-delta areas, the number of rotifer species reached up to 300 [
13], cladocerans to 43, copepods to 50 species. Zooplankton of the Caspian Sea was represented by autochthonous species (16 species of cladocerans, 7 species of copepods, and 2 species of rotifers). The widespread endemic of the Caspian Sea was microcrustaceans
Eurytemora grimmi (G. O. Sars, 1897),
Eurytemora minor (Behning, 1938),
Polyphemus exiguus G.O. Sars, 1897, and all species of
Apagis and
Cercopagis, besides
Cercopagis pengoi (Ostroumov, 1891). They were widely distributed in the middle deep-water part of the Caspian Sea where there was stable salinity [
14]. However, after functioning shipping links in the Caspian Sea were established with the Baltic and White Seas through the Volga–Baltic waterway and the White Sea–Baltic Channel, non-indigenous species started to transfer through ship ballast waters—one of the main reasons for the long-term change in marine ecosystems. A vivid example is the appearance of the predatory ctenophore
Mnemiopsis leidyi (A. Agasis) in the Caspian Sea, which has influenced all links of the food web [
11,
12,
15,
16]. First of all, with the appearance of ctenophores, native species of the Caspian Sea, the microcrustaceans
Eurytemora grimmi and
Eurytemora minor began to disappear [
11,
12,
15,
16,
17].
The last time scrutinizing zooplankton studies were carried out in the Caspian Sea was in 2008 and 2016. According to published data, 37 taxa were identified in the zooplankton of the Kazakhstan part of the Caspian Sea in that period [
5]. The number of planktonic invertebrates varied from 3600 to 150,800 individual/m
3, and the biomass from 488.68 to 1766.5 mg/m
3. The basis of zooplankton quantitative variables was formed by rotifers
Brachionus quadridentatus, cladocerans
Evadne anonyx,
Podonevadne angusta,
Podonevadne camptonyx,
Podonevadne trigona, and copepods
Acartia tonsa and
Calanipeda aquedulcis. In terms of abundance, the Shannon diversity index varied from 0.44 to 1.95 bits/ind. and from 0.51 bits/mg to 2.35 bits/mg [
5,
6].
Zooplankton of the Caspian Sea is relatively well studied; however that information outdated. The novelty of this current work is associated with assessing the current state of the zooplankton community of the Middle Caspian Sea and determining the possible reasons for zooplankton structural alterations.
4. Discussion
During the study period, the Middle Caspian Sea zooplankton had low species richness, abundance, and biomass values; this zooplankton structure is characteristic of deep water [
29]. The content of nutrients in deep water areas is lower than in estuaries; therefore, conditions for the growth and development of aquatic organisms are unfavorable in deep water areas [
30].
One-way ANOVA analysis, which allows the determination of statistically significant differences between structures of zooplankton in different years of study, detected significant differences in the abundance of cladocerans, copepods, copepod biomass, and Shannon–Wiener diversity Index. The abundance and biomass of crustaceans (cladocerans and copepods) decreased in 2021 compared to 2008, 2016, and 2020 data. Alterations in the structure of the community may be associated with fluctuations in environmental parameters (primarily salinity, temperature) and competition for food and with the presence and impact of predators [
15,
16,
20].
As in the Black and Azov Seas, in the Caspian Sea, the maximum value of the quantitative variables of crustaceans, which play the dominant role, is typical for the summer-autumn period [
29,
31]. Nevertheless, copepods
Acartia tonsa play a dominant role in zooplankton of the Caspian Sea throughout the whole year [
5,
6]. The contribution of this species in abundance and biomass of zooplankton of the Caspian Sea reaches 60–90%. The proportion of
Acartia tonsa in the quantitative variables of zooplankton of the Middle Caspian Sea reduced from 60–97% in 2008, 2016, and 2020 to 40% in 2021 [
5,
6]. In 2021, the dominant species of zooplankton was cladoceran
Evadne nordmanni. According to the literature,
Acartia tonsa is a euryhaline and eurythermal species. It can withstand salinity fluctuations from 10 to 15‰ and temperatures from 5 °C to 33 °C [
32]. According to hydrochemical data, salinity and water temperature were optimal for copepod
Acartia tonsa in 2021. Another reason for decreasing the quantitative variables of the constant dominant copepod
Acartia tonsa should be competition over common food resources. The life cycle of crustaceans
Acartia tonsa strictly depends on the amount of the available feeding base. The low amount of forage supplies cease the growth rate of these crustaceans [
33]. The forage base of cladoceran
Evadne nordmanni and copepod
Acartia tonsa have similar elements. Diatoms, dinoflagellates, and peredinum are part of the food base of these species [
20].
Due to a lack of forage copepods
Acartia tonsa may be prey for predatory cladoceran
Evadne nordmanni. This is supported by the presence of copepod eggs in the food base of
Evadne nordmanni in water bodies of Scotland [
34], as well as the case that
Evadne nordmanni only consumes food of animal origin in the Mediterranean Sea [
35]. Additionally, the forage of other representatives of the genus
Evadne or congeneric residents consisted of 50%
Eurytemora, 22% of copepod nauplii, and 28% of polyphemids in the Caspian Sea [
11].
During the research period,
Acartia tonsa was represented mainly by individuals at the initial stages of development. It is known that in the planktonic fauna of the Middle Caspian Sea in other periods of 2021, along with the predatory cladoceran
Evadne nordmanni, there was a predator
Mnemiopsis leidyi [
36]. It is possible that ctenophore
Mnemiopsis leidyi started to feed on adult individuals of copepod
Acartia tonsa. However, contrary to other prey copepods of ctenophore,
Acartia tonsa can save its population from ctenophore
Mnemiopsis leidyi due to its biological characteristics [
37]. Copepod
Acartia tonsa does not carry eggs attached to the genital segment sac and spawns eggs directly into the water. In this case, some eggs fall to the bottom, forming a resting stage. Therefore, the cessation of the lifecycle of an egg-carrying female does not lead to the cessation of all
Acartia tonsa offspring. The complete disappearance of the adult individuals of
Acartia tonsa, associated with the intensive development of the ctenophore, does not influence copepodite at an early stage, and nauplii constantly occur in the plankton.
Except for
Acartia tonsa, cladocerans
Evadne anonyx formed 10% of the zooplankton biomass in 2008 [
5] and 20% of zooplankton quantitative variables in 2016 [
6]. However, it was completely absent in the spring of 2020.
Evadne anonyx was present in zooplankton in the spring of 2021 but did not attain a high population abundance. Its abundance peaks occur from July to October at 16–20 °C temperatures and salinity of 12–13‰ in the Caspian Sea [
5]. The salinity and temperature are essential factors controlling the seasonal population dynamics of cladoceran
E. anonyx. A slight change in salinity could be the reason for the decrease in the contribution of
E. anonyx to the quantitative variables of zooplankton. The water salinity was 12–14‰ in 2016, favoring the cladocerans [
6,
38].
The Shannon’s diversity index calculated based on zooplankton abundance and biomass increased significantly from 0.58 to 1.78 bit/ind., and from 0.26 to 1.77 bit/mg compared to 2016 data. The similar values of Shannon’s diversity index were noted during the short-term elevation of salinity and organic pollution in the Caspian Sea [
5] and in the Azov Sea [
29].