This species of harpacticoid
copepod is found in high shore splash pools on coastlines ranging from
Portugal in the south to
Iceland and
Nova Scotia in the north. Sometimes it can be found below the high tide mark however, like in
Sweden, where it was found at depths of 10 metres in the
subtidal. These splash pools occur several metres above the high tide mark, isolated from the main coastal water as a microenvironment that can vary dramatically in chemical factors such as
salinity,
temperature and
oxygen levels over relatively short temporal scales.
T. brevicornis has the ability to survive these variable
environmental conditions (factors that limit predators such as fish to lower pools in the
intertidal zone) and as a result is known as a
euryhaline osmoconformer. Temperatures in supratidal splash pools tend to track air temperatures more closely than ocean temperatures as they are often extremely shallow (only a few cm deep to a few meters deep). Salinity also changes as the pools
evaporate or fill up (from 0-150 PSU) as the pools receive freshwater inputs from rain (especially so in the
West of Ireland) and saltwater from wave action during
spring tides or storm surges. The orange pigment
Astaxanthin is synthesised by the organism as an aid against UVAR and UVBR radiation from the sun, as rock pools can be quite exposed to
desiccation. The copepod's diet of
phytoplankton who are rich in Highly
Unsaturated Fatty Acids (HUFAs) allow them to synthesise this protective
protein, granting them
tolerance to radiation year-round. Within the pools, these relatively small (~1 mm long adult) organisms can thrive as
generalist benthic foragers, feeding primarily on
biofilms of phytoplankton and other
microbes on the rock pool bed. They also feed on
pelagic phytoplankton present in the water and on
epiphytic biofilms covering the dominant rock pool alga;
Enteromorpha intestinalis. Aside from a feeding platform,
T. brevicornis take advantage of the algae's hollow nature and are known to dwell within the actual
thallus of the green macroalga. Especially during times of
desiccation, the thallus provides a moist
refugium for the copepod when
rock pools completely dry out. Several hundred individuals can be found in a single strand of the hollow
seaweed, where they can survive weeks longer compared to natural
desiccation. Even when
Enteromorpha spp. aren't present in splash pools and conditions are getting too dry, the copepod can
burrow down where the loose sandstone still holds moisture. These behavioural
adaptations may be a key explanation in how this species can live and thrive in such an environment as extreme and as variable as the
supratidal. Part of the
Harpacticoid copepods of the
genus Tigriopus Norman 1868,
T. brevicornis belong to the subclass
Copepoda which is of high
ecological importance. Copepoda is the second largest
Crustacean taxa and approximately 12,000 species of copepods have been described. They are one of the dominant
taxa in aquatic
zooplankton communities representing 70% of the ocean’s
biomass and thus the principal link between the
phytoplankton and higher
trophic levels. Harpacticoids also play an important role in the marine meiobenthic
food web, especially as food for
juvenile fish. == Phylogeography, metapopulation and genetics studies==