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A matter of timing: heat wave impact on crustacean zooplankton
Author(s) -
HUBER VERONIKA,
ADRIAN RITA,
GERTEN DIETER
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
freshwater biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.297
H-Index - 156
eISSN - 1365-2427
pISSN - 0046-5070
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2010.02411.x
Subject(s) - zooplankton , climate change , environmental science , ecology , global warming , abundance (ecology) , ecosystem , phenology , heat wave , atmospheric sciences , biology , geology
Summary 1. Climate change has affected zooplankton phenology and abundance in many freshwater ecosystems. The strong temperature anomalies that characterise summer heat waves make these events particularly suitable to study the effects of different seasonal warming patterns on zooplankton. Since heat waves are expected to occur more frequently under continuing climate change, they may also allow us to investigate how freshwater systems will be affected in the future. 2. Using a long‐term data set (1991–2007) from a shallow, eutrophic lake in Germany, we identify time periods in spring and summer during which cyclopoid copepods and bosminids are particularly sensitive to changes in water temperature. Based on this knowledge, we consider why summer populations responded differently to recent heat wave events that occurred at different times in the season. 3. Linear regressions of moving averages suggested that water temperatures shortly before and shortly after the clear‐water phase (CWP) were crucial for summer development of bosminids and cyclopoid copepods, respectively. Algal food availability (diatoms and cryptophytes) in the first weeks after the CWP also strongly influenced the summer populations of the two zooplankton groups. 4. Inter‐annual differences in water temperature during the critical time periods at least partly explained the contrasting responses of cyclopoid copepods and bosminids to heat wave events. 5. Our findings indicate that the zooplankton response to climate warming, particularly to heat wave events, is critically dependent on the temporal pattern of elevated water temperatures. Beyond that, we show that the summer zooplankton populations react to periods of warming in relation to events in the plankton annual cycle (such as the CWP in eutrophic lakes) rather than to warming at a fixed time in the season.

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