Impacts of climate change on the planktonic food web in the European Arctic

Across the globe, planktonic consumer resource interactions are being altered by changing environmental conditions. Climate change is altering the distributions of both phytoplankton and zooplankton, thus modifying the base of the food web, which has consequences for the feeding environment of consu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Price, Elliott
Other Authors: Jeffreys, Rachel, Mahaffey, Claire, Stern, Rowena, Castellani, Claudia
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/3153996/
http://livrepository.liverpool.ac.uk/3153996/1/201282534_Dec2021.pdf
Description
Summary:Across the globe, planktonic consumer resource interactions are being altered by changing environmental conditions. Climate change is altering the distributions of both phytoplankton and zooplankton, thus modifying the base of the food web, which has consequences for the feeding environment of consumers and predators with knock on effects for population viability. In the Arctic, inflows of Atlantic waters are strengthening, which is increasing sea surface temperatures, weakening stratification and transporting temperate and sub-Arctic plankton species deeper into the Arctic interior. In other regions, increased sea ice melt is freshening and stratifying the water column, causing phenological shifts to phytoplankton blooms. These heterogenous alterations have direct effects to zooplankton feeding and the wider food web. Our knowledge of the responses of zooplankton feeding within the planktonic Arctic food web is limited due to the highly seasonal nature of the Arctic environment that adds to food web complexity. Untangling this complexity remains a challenge if we are to accurately predict and understand the functioning of marine food webs in the Arctic. In this thesis I aim to resolve the spatial and interannual feeding ecology the calanoid copepods Calanus in the Arctic. I use multivariate statistical techniques on an abundance Continuous Plankton Recorder dataset to define the feeding environment for Calanus and a dual biomarker approach of isotope analysis and DNA gut content analysis to estimate the feeding strategies of Calanus. These dietary descriptors are contextualised by environmental parameters derived from CTD casts, remote sensing databases and models. Changes to the food environment for Calanus were variable on both spatial and interannual scales, these include differences in net primary production, and in the phytoplankton assemblage. The drivers of these changes were factors that altered the strength of stratification, which impact nutrient delivery and primary production in the surface. Despite ...