Contrasting Life Traits of Sympatric Calanus glacialis and C. finmarchicus in a Warming Arctic Revealed by a Year-Round Study in Isfjorden, Svalbard
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27413Dato
2022-05-12Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
The calanoid copepod Calanus glacialis dominates the mesozooplankton biomass in the
Arctic shelf seas, but its smaller North Atlantic sibling Calanus finmarchicus is expanding
northwards and may potentially replace it if the climate continues to warm. Here we studied
the population structure, overwintering strategies, gonad maturation and egg production of
C. glacialis and C. finmarchicus over a period of 15 consecutive months in a high-Arctic fjord
with sub-Arctic ocean climate and no sea ice formation in winter. The relative proportions of
C. glacialis and C. finmarchicus varied throughout the study period, but with an overall
dominance of C. glacialis. The overwintering population of C. glacialis was dominated by
copepodite stage CIV (74%) while C. finmarchicus overwintered mainly as CV (65%),
reflecting a primarily two- and one-year life cycle, respectively. Adult males and females of C.
glacialis appeared as early as October with a peak during December-January, two months
earlier than in C. finmarchicus, with a corresponding one-month earlier peak in recruitment
for C. glacialis. While C. glacialis reproduced prior to the bloom with egg production peaking
during the bloom, C. finmarchicus started egg laying during the bloom and continued to
reproduce throughout the summer. Seasonal changes in the population structure suggest
that C. finmarchicus born early in spring are able to develop to CV during summer and
overwinter successfully, while offspring born later in the season do most likely not reach the
CV overwintering stage. The ability to reproduce early and the flexibility to alter between 1-
and 2-year life cycles give C. glacialis an advantage over C. finmarchicus in high-Arctic
unpredictable environments with short-pulsed primary production regimes. Our data
indicate that C. glacialis and C. finmarchicus occupy similar environmental niches, but
different timing in reproduction reduces the competition. If sea temperatures remain within
their temperature-tolerance ranges, both C. glacialis and C. finmarchicus seem to benefit
from warming due to accelerating growth and higher survival of the recruits as long as
C. glacialis has access to a colder refuge by descending to deeper depths.
Forlag
Frontiers MediaSitering
Hatlebakk, Kosobokova, Daase, Søreide. Contrasting Life Traits of Sympatric Calanus glacialis and C. finmarchicus in a Warming Arctic Revealed by a Year-Round Study in Isfjorden, Svalbard. Frontiers in Marine Science. 2022;9Metadata
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