Effects of increasing temperatures on population dynamics of the zebra mussel Dreissena polymorpha: implications from an individual-based model
Authored by Eva Maria Griebeler, Alfred Seitz
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1007/s00442-006-0591-0
Sponsors:
German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha, Pallas, 1771) have had
unprecedented success in colonizing European and North American waters
under strongly differing temperature regimes. Thus, the mussel is an
excellent model of a species which is able to cope with increasing water
temperatures expected under global change. We study three principle
scenarios for successful survival of the mussel under rising
temperatures: (1) no adaptation to future thermal conditions is needed, existing performance is great enough; (2) a shift (adaptation) towards
higher temperatures is required; or (3) a broadening of the range of
tolerated temperatures (adaptation) is needed. We developed a stochastic
individual-based model which describes the demographic growth of D.
polymorpha to determine which of the alternative scenarios might enable
future survival. It is a day-degree model which is determined by ambient
water temperature. Daily temperatures are generated based on long-term
data of the River Rhine. Predictions under temperature conditions as
recently observed for this river that are made for the phenology of
reproduction, the age distribution and the shell length distribution
conform with field observations. Our simulations show that temporal
patterns in the life cycle of the mussel will be altered under rising
temperatures. In all scenarios spawning started earlier in the year and
the total reproductive output of a population was dominated by the
events later in the spawning period. For maximum temperatures between 20
and 26 degrees C no thermal adaptation of the mussel is required. No
extinctions and stable age distributions over generations were observed
in scenario 2 for all maximum temperatures studied. In contrast, no
population with a fixed range of tolerated temperatures survived in
scenario 3 with high maximum temperatures (28, 30, 32 degrees C). Age
distributions showed an excess of 0+ individuals which resulted in an
extinction of the population for several thermal ranges investigated.
Tags
growth
Climate-change
Responses
Phenology
Sea
Great-lakes
British butterflies
Breeding parameters
Reproductive-cycle
River rhine