Variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the NE Pacific

The Continuous Plankton Recorder has been deployed in the NE Pacific on two intersecting transects since 2000. Many deployments included a temperature sensor providing in situ temperature data to supplement the species abundance data for 1300 samples. Twenty-nine copepod taxa were sufficiently abundan...

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Main Authors: Batten, SD, Walne, AW
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://plymsea.ac.uk/id/eprint/5660/
id ftplymouthml:oai:plymsea.ac.uk:5660
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spelling ftplymouthml:oai:plymsea.ac.uk:5660 2023-05-15T18:28:27+02:00 Variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the NE Pacific Batten, SD Walne, AW 2011 http://plymsea.ac.uk/id/eprint/5660/ unknown Batten, SD; Walne, AW. 2011 Variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the NE Pacific. Journal of Plankton Research, 33 (11). 1643– 1653. Publication - Article NonPeerReviewed 2011 ftplymouthml 2022-09-13T05:48:23Z The Continuous Plankton Recorder has been deployed in the NE Pacific on two intersecting transects since 2000. Many deployments included a temperature sensor providing in situ temperature data to supplement the species abundance data for 1300 samples. Twenty-nine copepod taxa were sufficiently abundant to examine their temperature-related distributions. Groups of warm- and cold-water species were identified, with overlapping distributions between 48 and 588N. Recent fluctuations in ocean climate, from the warmest year on record in 2005 to one of the coldest in decades in 2008, provided ideal conditions to observe temperature-related interannual variability. The abundance and northwards extension of warm water species were significantly positively correlated with mean annual temperature and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. The cold water species showed no correlations with temperature/Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) within the study region; however, if the 4 years of sampling that extended south to 398N were examined separately, there was a strong relationship between temperature/PDO and the southern extent of subarctic copepods. Under warm ocean conditions, the range overlap of the two groups will increase as warm water species extend northwards, causing an increase in copepod diversity. Since warm water species are generally smaller and nutritionally poorer, this has implications for higher trophic levels Article in Journal/Newspaper Subarctic Copepods Plymouth Marine Science Electronic Archive (PlyMSEA - Plymouth Marine Laboratory, PML)
institution Open Polar
collection Plymouth Marine Science Electronic Archive (PlyMSEA - Plymouth Marine Laboratory, PML)
op_collection_id ftplymouthml
language unknown
description The Continuous Plankton Recorder has been deployed in the NE Pacific on two intersecting transects since 2000. Many deployments included a temperature sensor providing in situ temperature data to supplement the species abundance data for 1300 samples. Twenty-nine copepod taxa were sufficiently abundant to examine their temperature-related distributions. Groups of warm- and cold-water species were identified, with overlapping distributions between 48 and 588N. Recent fluctuations in ocean climate, from the warmest year on record in 2005 to one of the coldest in decades in 2008, provided ideal conditions to observe temperature-related interannual variability. The abundance and northwards extension of warm water species were significantly positively correlated with mean annual temperature and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. The cold water species showed no correlations with temperature/Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) within the study region; however, if the 4 years of sampling that extended south to 398N were examined separately, there was a strong relationship between temperature/PDO and the southern extent of subarctic copepods. Under warm ocean conditions, the range overlap of the two groups will increase as warm water species extend northwards, causing an increase in copepod diversity. Since warm water species are generally smaller and nutritionally poorer, this has implications for higher trophic levels
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Batten, SD
Walne, AW
spellingShingle Batten, SD
Walne, AW
Variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the NE Pacific
author_facet Batten, SD
Walne, AW
author_sort Batten, SD
title Variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the NE Pacific
title_short Variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the NE Pacific
title_full Variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the NE Pacific
title_fullStr Variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the NE Pacific
title_full_unstemmed Variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the NE Pacific
title_sort variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the ne pacific
publishDate 2011
url http://plymsea.ac.uk/id/eprint/5660/
genre Subarctic
Copepods
genre_facet Subarctic
Copepods
op_relation Batten, SD; Walne, AW. 2011 Variability in northwards extension of warm water copepods in the NE Pacific. Journal of Plankton Research, 33 (11). 1643– 1653.
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