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Dive into the research topics where Hyung-Ku Kang is active.

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Featured researches published by Hyung-Ku Kang.


Ocean Science Journal | 2007

Direct examination of the dietary preference of the copepodcalanus helgolandicus using the colorimetric approach

Hyung-Ku Kang; Serge A. Poulet; Se-Jong Ju

The food selectivity of tethered females of the copepodCalanus helgolandicus was examined by using the colorimetric approach. First, feeding behavior of the copepod did not show any differences between the red-color stained with neutral red and non-stained diets using the diatomCoscinodiscus curvatulus. Then, the copepods were fed a mixtures of two diets, the diatomC. curvatulus, stained with neutral red, and the dinoflagellateGymnodinium sanguineum for 14~60 minutes of feeding duration. The foregut colors of females were examined using a stereo-microscope and a video monitor. The foreguts of animals fed with a high density of diatoms in mixed diets showed a dark red color, whereas those fed with a high density of dinoflagellate in mixed diets were a dark yellow. The results suggest that this species of copepod may not selectively feed either one of the diets used for this study. Their feeding activity may be more likely related to the density of available prey in their environment. Therefore, this quick and easy colorimetric approach could provide very useful information, like the pre-screening procedure before designing and conducting the time-consuming and complex feeding experiments to understand the feeding ecology of copepods.


Ocean Science Journal | 2018

Grazing Impact of the Copepod Calanus sinicus on Phytoplankton in the Northern East China Sea in Late Spring

Garam Kim; Hyung-Ku Kang

We investigated the feeding habits of Calanus sinicus during its four developmental stages as copepodite 4 (CIV), copepodite 5 (CV), adult males and females in early June 2015 at 12 sampling stations along the southern coast of Korea to the northern East China Sea, to better understand the role of C. sinicus in controlling phytoplankton stocks. Ingestion rate, daily ration as body carbon, population ingestion rate, and grazing impact were estimated using the gut pigment method. The mean biomass of CVs was the greatest (13.5 mg C m–3) and that of adult males was the lowest (0.7 mg C m–3). The ingestion rate per C. sinicus individual tended to increase with developmental stage, with the highest rate in adult females (519 ng chl ind–1 d–1) and the lowest rate in CIVs (305 ng chl ind–1 d–1). A significant correlation was found between ingestion rate and temperature, but not salinity or chlorophyll-a concentration. The daily ration of C. sinicus as body carbon significantly decreased with increased body weight, with the highest value found in CIVs (66.4%) and the lowest value in adult males (30%). Despite the high ingestion rate of the adults, the mean grazing impact of C. sinicus on phytoplankton biomass, in terms of chlorophyll-a concentration, was the highest in CVs (2.6%), followed by CIVs and adult females, and was the lowest in adult males (0.1%). The higher grazing impact of copepodites than adults underscores the importance of evaluating copepodite stages in the feeding studies of marine food webs.


Ocean Science Journal | 2017

Seasonal and interannual variation in mesozooplankton community structure off Tongyeong, southeastern coast of Korea, from 2011 to 2014

Garam Kim; Hyung-Ku Kang; Jung-Goo Myoung

Mesozooplankton community structure and environmental factors were monitored monthly at a fixed station off Tongyeong, southeastern coast of Korea, from 2011 to 2014 to better understand the variability of the mesozooplankton community in relation to changes in the marine environment. Total mesozooplankton density varied from 747 to 8,945 inds. m-3 with peaks in summer. The surface water temperature (r = 0.338, p < 0.05) and chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) concentration (r = 0.505, p < 0.001) were parts of the factors that may have induced the mesozooplankton peaks in summer. Copepods accounted for 71% of total mesozooplankton. Total copepod density, particularly cyclopoid copepods, increased during the study period. Cumulative sum plots and anomalies of the cyclopoid copepod density revealed a change of the cyclopoid density from negative to positive in June 2013. A positive relationship between cyclopoid copepods and the Chl-a concentration (r = 0.327, p < 0.05) appeared to be one of the reasons for the increase in cyclopoids. Dominant mesozooplankton species such as Paracalanus parvus s.l., Oikopleura spp., Evadne tergestina, Cirripedia larvae, Corycaeus affinis, Calanus sinicus, and Oithona similis accounted for 60% of total mesozooplankton density. Based on cluster analysis of the mesozooplankton community by year, the seasonal distinction among groups was different in 2014 compared to other years. P. parvus s.l. and its copepodites contributed most in all groups in all four years. Our results suggest that the high Chl-a concentration since 2013 may have caused the changes in mesozooplankton community structure in the study area.


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 1997

The paradox of diatom-copepod interactions*

Syuhei Ban; Carolyn W. Burns; Jacques Castel; Yannick Chaudron; Epaminondas D. Christou; Rubén Escribano; Serena Fonda Umani; Stéphane Gasparini; Francisco GuerreroRuiz; Monica Hoffmeyer; Adrianna Ianora; Hyung-Ku Kang; Mohamed Laabir; Arnaud Lacoste; Antonio Miralto; Xiuren Ning; Serge A. Poulet; Valeriano Rodriguez; Jeffrey Runge; Junxian Shi; Michel Starr; Shin-ichi Uye; Yijun Wang


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2000

Reproductive success in Calanus helgolandicus as a function of diet and egg cannibalism

Hyung-Ku Kang; Serge A. Poulet


Journal of Plankton Research | 2009

Contribution of auto- and heterotrophic protozoa to the diet of copepods in the Ulleung Basin, East Sea/Japan Sea

Eun Jin Yang; Hyung-Ku Kang; Sinjae Yoo; Jung-Ho Hyun


Journal of Plankton Research | 2012

Effects of suspended sediments on reproductive responses of Paracalanus sp. (Copepoda: Calanoida) in the laboratory

Hyung-Ku Kang


Journal of Plankton Research | 2000

A laboratory study of the effect of non-phytoplankton diets on the reproduction of Calanus helgolandicus

Hyung-Ku Kang; Serge A. Poulet; Arnaud Lacoste; Yong Joo Kang


Ocean Science Journal | 2011

Egg production rate of the copepod Calanus sinicus off the Korean coast of the Yellow Sea during spring

Hyung-Ku Kang; Chang-Rae Lee; Keun-Hyung Choi


Journal of Plankton Research | 2004

In situ egg production rate of the planktonic copepod Acartia steueri in Ilkwang Bay, southeastern coast of Korea

Yeongha Jung; Hyung-Ku Kang; Yong Joo Kang

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Yong Joo Kang

Pukyong National University

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Adrianna Ianora

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Antonio Miralto

Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn

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Jeffrey Runge

Fisheries and Oceans Canada

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