The Death Assemblage As a Marker For Habitat and an Indicator of Climate Change: Georges Bank, Surfclams and Ocean Quahogs

A comprehensive dataset for the Georges Bank region is used to directly compare the distribution of the death assemblage and the living community at large spatial scales and to assess the application of the death assemblage in tracking changes in species’ distributional pattern as a consequence of c...

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Published in:Continental Shelf Research
Main Authors: Powell, Eric N., Kuykendall, Kelsey M., Moreno, Paula
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: The Aquila Digital Community 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/15227
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2017.05.008
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spelling ftsouthmissispun:oai:aquila.usm.edu:fac_pubs-16548 2023-07-30T04:02:14+02:00 The Death Assemblage As a Marker For Habitat and an Indicator of Climate Change: Georges Bank, Surfclams and Ocean Quahogs Powell, Eric N. Kuykendall, Kelsey M. Moreno, Paula 2017-06-15T07:00:00Z https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/15227 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2017.05.008 unknown The Aquila Digital Community https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/15227 https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2017.05.008 Faculty Publications spisula arctica surfclam ocean quahog death assemblage climate change habitat Georges bank continental shelf Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology Physical Sciences and Mathematics text 2017 ftsouthmissispun https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2017.05.008 2023-07-15T18:50:55Z A comprehensive dataset for the Georges Bank region is used to directly compare the distribution of the death assemblage and the living community at large spatial scales and to assess the application of the death assemblage in tracking changes in species’ distributional pattern as a consequence of climate change. Focus is placed on the biomass-dominant clam species of the northwest Atlantic continental shelf: the surfclam Spisula solidissima and the ocean quahog Arctica islandica, for which extensive datasets exist on the distributions of the living population and the death assemblage. For both surfclams and ocean quahogs, the distribution of dead shells, in the main, tracked the distribution of live animals relatively closely. Thus, for both species, the presence of dead shells was a positive indicator of present, recent, or past occupation by live animals. Shell dispersion within habitat was greater for surfclams than for ocean quahogs either due to spatial time averaging, animals not living in all habitable areas all of the time, or parautochthonous redistribution of shell. The regional distribution of dead shell differed from the distribution of live animals, for both species, in a systematic way indicative of range shifts due to climate change. In each case the differential distribution was consistent with warming of the northwest Atlantic. Present-day overlap of live surfclams with live ocean quahogs was consistent with the expectation that the surfclam's range is shifting into deeper water in response to the recent warming trend. The presence of locations devoid of dead shells where live surfclams nevertheless were collected measures the recentness of this event. The presence of dead ocean quahog shells at shallower depths than live ocean quahogs offers good evidence that a range shift has occurred in the past, but prior to the initiation of routine surveys in 1980. Possibly, this range shift tracks initial colonization at the end of the Little Ice Age. Text Arctica islandica Northwest Atlantic Ocean quahog The University of Southern Mississippi: The Aquila Digital Community Continental Shelf Research 142 14 31
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Southern Mississippi: The Aquila Digital Community
op_collection_id ftsouthmissispun
language unknown
topic spisula
arctica
surfclam
ocean quahog
death assemblage
climate change
habitat
Georges bank
continental shelf
Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology
Physical Sciences and Mathematics
spellingShingle spisula
arctica
surfclam
ocean quahog
death assemblage
climate change
habitat
Georges bank
continental shelf
Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology
Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Powell, Eric N.
Kuykendall, Kelsey M.
Moreno, Paula
The Death Assemblage As a Marker For Habitat and an Indicator of Climate Change: Georges Bank, Surfclams and Ocean Quahogs
topic_facet spisula
arctica
surfclam
ocean quahog
death assemblage
climate change
habitat
Georges bank
continental shelf
Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology
Physical Sciences and Mathematics
description A comprehensive dataset for the Georges Bank region is used to directly compare the distribution of the death assemblage and the living community at large spatial scales and to assess the application of the death assemblage in tracking changes in species’ distributional pattern as a consequence of climate change. Focus is placed on the biomass-dominant clam species of the northwest Atlantic continental shelf: the surfclam Spisula solidissima and the ocean quahog Arctica islandica, for which extensive datasets exist on the distributions of the living population and the death assemblage. For both surfclams and ocean quahogs, the distribution of dead shells, in the main, tracked the distribution of live animals relatively closely. Thus, for both species, the presence of dead shells was a positive indicator of present, recent, or past occupation by live animals. Shell dispersion within habitat was greater for surfclams than for ocean quahogs either due to spatial time averaging, animals not living in all habitable areas all of the time, or parautochthonous redistribution of shell. The regional distribution of dead shell differed from the distribution of live animals, for both species, in a systematic way indicative of range shifts due to climate change. In each case the differential distribution was consistent with warming of the northwest Atlantic. Present-day overlap of live surfclams with live ocean quahogs was consistent with the expectation that the surfclam's range is shifting into deeper water in response to the recent warming trend. The presence of locations devoid of dead shells where live surfclams nevertheless were collected measures the recentness of this event. The presence of dead ocean quahog shells at shallower depths than live ocean quahogs offers good evidence that a range shift has occurred in the past, but prior to the initiation of routine surveys in 1980. Possibly, this range shift tracks initial colonization at the end of the Little Ice Age.
format Text
author Powell, Eric N.
Kuykendall, Kelsey M.
Moreno, Paula
author_facet Powell, Eric N.
Kuykendall, Kelsey M.
Moreno, Paula
author_sort Powell, Eric N.
title The Death Assemblage As a Marker For Habitat and an Indicator of Climate Change: Georges Bank, Surfclams and Ocean Quahogs
title_short The Death Assemblage As a Marker For Habitat and an Indicator of Climate Change: Georges Bank, Surfclams and Ocean Quahogs
title_full The Death Assemblage As a Marker For Habitat and an Indicator of Climate Change: Georges Bank, Surfclams and Ocean Quahogs
title_fullStr The Death Assemblage As a Marker For Habitat and an Indicator of Climate Change: Georges Bank, Surfclams and Ocean Quahogs
title_full_unstemmed The Death Assemblage As a Marker For Habitat and an Indicator of Climate Change: Georges Bank, Surfclams and Ocean Quahogs
title_sort death assemblage as a marker for habitat and an indicator of climate change: georges bank, surfclams and ocean quahogs
publisher The Aquila Digital Community
publishDate 2017
url https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/15227
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2017.05.008
genre Arctica islandica
Northwest Atlantic
Ocean quahog
genre_facet Arctica islandica
Northwest Atlantic
Ocean quahog
op_source Faculty Publications
op_relation https://aquila.usm.edu/fac_pubs/15227
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2017.05.008
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.csr.2017.05.008
container_title Continental Shelf Research
container_volume 142
container_start_page 14
op_container_end_page 31
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