Global change and climate-driven invasion of the Pacific oyster (Crassostrea gigas) along European coasts: a bioenergetics modelling approach
Authored by Yoann Thomas, Stephane Pouvreau, Marianne Alunno-Bruscia, Laurent Barille, Francis Gohin, Philippe Bryere, Pierre Gernez
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1111/jbi.12665
Sponsors:
French National Research Agency (ANR)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
AimThe spread of non-indigenous species in marine ecosystems world-wide
is one of today's most serious environmental concerns. Using mechanistic
modelling, we investigated how global change relates to the invasion of
European coasts by a non-native marine invertebrate, the Pacific oyster
Crassostrea gigas.
LocationBourgneuf Bay on the French Atlantic coast was considered as the
northern boundary of C.gigas expansion at the time of its introduction
to Europe in the 1970s. From this latitudinal reference, variations in
the spatial distribution of the C.gigas reproductive niche were analysed
along the north-western European coast from Gibraltar to Norway.
MethodsThe effects of environmental variations on C.gigas physiology and
phenology were studied using a bioenergetics model based on Dynamic
Energy Budget theory. The model was forced with environmental time
series including insitu phytoplankton data, and satellite data of sea
surface temperature and suspended particulate matter concentration.
ResultsSimulation outputs were successfully validated against insitu
oyster growth data. In Bourgneuf Bay, the rise in seawater temperature
and phytoplankton concentration has increased C.gigas reproductive
effort and led to precocious spawning periods since the 1960s. At the
European scale, seawater temperature increase caused a drastic northward
shift (1400km within 30years) in the C.gigas reproductive niche and
optimal thermal conditions for early life stage development.
Main conclusionsWe demonstrated that the poleward expansion of the
invasive species C.gigas is related to global warming and increase in
phytoplankton abundance. The combination of mechanistic bioenergetics
modelling with insitu and satellite environmental data is a valuable
framework for ecosystem studies. It offers a generic approach to analyse
historical geographical shifts and to predict the biogeographical
changes expected to occur in a climate-changing world.
Tags
growth
Ocean
Wadden sea
Dynamic energy budget
Suspended particulate matter
Sea-surface
temperature
English-channel
Chlorophyll-a
In-situ
Satellite