Life history and biogeography of Calanus copepods in the Arctic Ocean: An individual-based modeling study
Authored by Rubao Ji, Cabell S Davis, Changsheng Chen, Robert C Beardsley, Robert G Campbell, Carin J Ashjian, Geoffrey W Cowles, Guoping Gao
Date Published: 2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.pocean.2011.10.001
Sponsors:
Shanghai Ocean University
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Calanus spp. copepods play a key role in the Arctic pelagic ecosystem.
Among four congeneric species of Calanus found in the Arctic Ocean and
its marginal seas, two are expatriates in the Arctic (Calanus
finmarchicus and Calanus marshallae) and two are endemic (Calanus
glacialis and Calanus hyperboreus). The biogeography of these species
likely is controlled by the interactions of their life history traits
and physical environment. A mechanistic understanding of these
interactions is critical to predicting their future responses to a
warming environment. Using a 3-D individual-based model that
incorporates temperature-dependent and, for some cases, food-dependent
development rates, we show that (1) C. finmarchicus and C marshallae are
unable to penetrate, survive, and colonize the Arctic Ocean under
present conditions of temperature, food availability, and length of the
growth season, mainly due to insufficient time to reach their diapausing
stage and slow transport of the copepods into the Arctic Ocean during
the growing season or even during the following winter at the depths the
copepods are believed to diapause. (2) For the two endemic species, the
model suggests that their capability of diapausing at earlier copepodite
stages and utilizing ice-algae as a food source (thus prolonging the
growth season length) contribute to the population sustainability in the
Arctic Ocean. (3) The inability of C. hyperboreus to attain their first
diapause stage in the central Arctic, as demonstrated by the model, suggests that the central Arctic population may be advected from the
surrounding shelf regions along with multi-year successive development
and diapausing, and/or our current estimation of the growth parameters
and the growth season length (based on empirical assessment or
literature) needs to be further evaluated. Increasing the length of the
growth season or increasing water temperature by 2 degrees C, and
therefore increasing development rates, greatly increased the area of
the central Arctic in which the Arctic endemics could reach diapause but
had little effect on the regions of successful diapause for the
expatriate species. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Egg-production
Grazing impact
Northern bering-sea
Barents sea
Fram strait
Zooplankton distribution
Population development
Greenland sea
Chukchi sea
Food-chain