Experimentally determined temperature thresholds for Arctic plankton community metabolism
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/5982Date
2013Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Holding, Johnna; Duarte, Carlos M.; Arrieta, Jesús M.; Vaquer-Suyner3, Riser; Coello-Camba, Alexandra; Wassmann, Paul; Agusti, SusanaAbstract
Climate warming is especially severe in the Arctic,
where the average temperature is increasing 0.4 C per
decade, two to three times higher than the global average
rate. Furthermore, the Arctic has lost more than half of its
summer ice extent since 1980 and predictions suggest that
the Arctic will be ice free in the summer as early as 2050,
which could increase the rate of warming. Predictions based
on the metabolic theory of ecology assume that temperature
increase will enhance metabolic rates and thus both the rate
of primary production and respiration will increase. However,
these predictions do not consider the specific metabolic
balance of the communities. We tested, experimentally, the
response of Arctic plankton communities to seawater temperature
spanning from 1 C to 10 C. Two types of communities
were tested, open-ocean Arctic communities from
water collected in the Barents Sea and Atlantic influenced
fjord communities from water collected in the Svalbard fjord
system. Metabolic rates did indeed increase as suggested
by metabolic theory, however these results suggest an experimental
temperature threshold of 5 C, beyond which the
metabolism of plankton communities shifts from autotrophic
to heterotrophic. This threshold is also validated by field
measurements across a range of temperatures which suggested
a temperature 5.4 C beyond which Arctic plankton
communities switch to heterotrophy. Barents Sea communities
showed a much clearer threshold response to temperature
manipulations than fjord communities.
Publisher
CopernicusEuropean Geosciences Union
Citation
Biogeosciences 10(2013) nr. 1 s. 357-370Metadata
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