Sediment traps are the major oceanographic tool for collecting passively sinking particulate material (the “particle flux”) in the ocean. Sediment traps in the upper ocean also collect actively sinking zooplankton that are usually manually removed prior to analysis. Microscospic analysis of sediment trap samples collected over a 19-month period in the eastern North Pacific reveals that zooplankton “swimmers” are a larger problem than previously recognized. Zooplankton that are cryptic (i.e. difficult to see or distinguish from the detrital material) and difficult to remove (principally gelatinous zooplankton) may have contributed up to 20 mg C m−2 day−1 to the “particulate flux”, with the highest values in the upper 150 m. This swimmer prob...