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Temperature‐mediated changes in zooplankton body size: large scale temporal and spatial analysis
Author(s) -
Evans Lowri E.,
Hirst Andrew G.,
Kratina Pavel,
Beaugrand Grégory
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ecography
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.973
H-Index - 128
eISSN - 1600-0587
pISSN - 0906-7590
DOI - 10.1111/ecog.04631
Subject(s) - ecology , trophic level , copepod , calanus , calanus finmarchicus , biology , zooplankton , community structure , abundance (ecology) , macroecology , climate change , pelagic zone , bergmann's rule , latitude , geography , biodiversity , crustacean , geodesy
Climate warming has been linked with changes in the spatiotemporal distribution of species and the body size structure of ecological communities. Body size is a master trait underlying a host of physiological, ecological and evolutionary processes. However, the relative importance of environmental drivers and life history strategies on community body size structure across large spatial and temporal scales is poorly understood. We used detailed data of 83 copepod species, monitored over a 57‐year period across the North Atlantic, to test how sea surface temperature, thermal and day length seasonality relate to observed latitudinal‐size clines of the zooplankton community. The genus Calanus includes dominant taxa in the North Atlantic that overwinter at ocean depth. Thus we compared the copepod community size structure with and without Calanus species, to partition the influence of this life history strategy. The mean community body size of copepods was positively associated with latitude and negatively associated with temperature, suggesting that these communities follow Bergmann's rule. Including Calanus species strengthens these relationships due to their larger than average body sizes and high seasonal abundances, indicating that the latitudinal‐size cline may be adaptive. We suggest that seasonal food availability prevents high abundance of smaller‐sized copepods at higher latitudes, and that active vertical migration of dominant pelagic species can increase their survival rate over the resource‐poor seasons. These findings improve our understanding of the impacts that climate warming has on ecological communities, with potential consequences for trophic interactions and biogeochemical processes that are well known to be size dependent.

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