The word 'plankton' was coined in 1887 by the German marine biologist Victor Hensen, who needed a collective term for the vast, diverse assemblage of organisms that drift passively in the open water of the oceans. He chose the Greek adjective 'planktos,' meaning 'wandering' or 'drifting,' from the verb 'plazein' (to drive astray, to lead sideways, to cause to wander). The Greek verb traces to PIE *pleh₂g- (to strike, to hit), with the semantic development being 'to strike' → 'to drive off course' → 'to cause to wander.' The word entered English from Hensen's German scientific publications around 1891.
The choice of name was precise and poetic. The defining characteristic of plankton is not their size (which ranges from microscopic bacteria to large jellyfish with meter-long tentacles), not their biology (which spans bacteria, algae, protists, crustaceans, larvae, and jellyfish), but their relationship to water movement: they are drifters, carried by currents rather than swimming against them. Hensen's Greek-derived name captures this single unifying feature — planktonic organisms are 'the wanderers,' 'the driven ones,' 'those who are carried.'
The etymological kinship between 'plankton' and 'planet' is one of the most elegant connections in scientific vocabulary. The ancient Greeks called the planets 'asteres planetai' — literally 'wandering stars' — because they moved across the night sky against the apparently fixed background of the constellations. Both 'plankton' (the wanderers of the sea) and 'planet' (the wanderers of the sky) derive from the same Greek verb 'plazein,' and both name entities defined by their motion relative to a fixed frame: plankton drift against the fixed geography of the ocean floor, planets wander against the fixed sphere of stars.
Hensen introduced 'plankton' as a counterpart to two other ecological terms that together describe the three modes of life in aquatic environments. 'Nekton' (from Greek 'nekton,' swimming) designates organisms capable of swimming against currents — fish, squid, marine mammals. 'Benthos' (from Greek 'benthos,' depth) designates organisms that live on or in the ocean floor — worms, clams, sea stars. This tripartite classification — plankton (drifters), nekton (swimmers), benthos (bottom-dwellers) — remains the fundamental ecological framework of
Plankton are subdivided into two major categories based on their nutritional mode. 'Phytoplankton' (from Greek 'phyton,' plant) are photosynthetic organisms — diatoms, cyanobacteria, dinoflagellates — that produce organic matter from sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water. They are the primary producers of the ocean, responsible for roughly half of all photosynthesis on Earth and generating much of the oxygen in the atmosphere. 'Zooplankton' (from Greek 'zoon,' animal) are the animal plankton — copepods, krill, larval fish
The PIE root *pleh₂g- (to strike) produced an unexpectedly diverse family across the Indo-European languages. In Latin, it gave 'plaga' (a blow, a wound, a net — something that strikes), which entered English through French as 'plague' (a disease that strikes a population). 'Plangere' (to strike, to beat the breast in grief) gave English 'plangent' (resounding mournfully). The semantic thread connecting 'plankton,' 'planet,' 'plague,' and 'plangent' is the original PIE concept of striking and driving — being struck by a blow and driven off course, whether the drifter is a microscopic alga in the Pacific, a celestial
Victor Hensen's coinage followed a well-established tradition of using Greek roots to name newly identified biological categories. The nineteenth century was the golden age of scientific nomenclature, and marine biology in particular drew heavily on Greek: 'biology' itself (life-study), 'ecology' (house-study), 'oceanography' (ocean-writing), 'taxonomy' (arrangement-law). Hensen's choice of 'plankton' was distinguished by its accuracy and its beauty — it named the largest biomass on Earth with a word that means nothing more than 'drifters,' capturing in six letters the essential condition of organisms that, despite their enormous collective power, have no individual control over where the currents carry them.