4.7 Article

Phenology of Oithona similis demonstrates that ecological flexibility may be a winning trait in the warming Arctic

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-98068-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Polish National Scientific Centre [2013/09/B/NZ8/03365]
  2. Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education
  3. project SEAPOP II [3605/SEAPOP/2016/2]
  4. project IMOS [3550/Norway/2016/2]

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The study reveals that in the rapidly warming Arctic, the abundance of Oithona similis is increasing, playing an important role in sustaining continuous carbon flow during the dark season and showing unique thermal tolerance and reproductive traits.
Rapidly warming Arctic is facing significant shifts in the zooplankton size-spectra manifested as increasing numbers of the small-sized copepod Oithona similis. Here we present a unique continuous data set covering 22 months, on its copepodite structure along with environmental drivers in the Atlantic-influenced high Arctic fjord Isfjorden (Spitsbergen). Abundance maxima of O. similis were observed in September when the highest seawater temperature was recorded. A high concentration of the indicator species of Atlantification Oithona atlantica was also observed at that time. The clear dominance of O. similis in the zooplankton community during the dark, theoretically unproductive season emphasizes its substantial role in sustaining a continuous carbon flow, when most of the large herbivorous copepods fall into sleeping state. The high sex ratio observed twice in both years during periods of high primary production suggests two main reproductive events per year. O. similis reproduced even in very low temperatures (< 0 degrees C) previously thought to limit their fecundity, which proves its unique thermal tolerance. Our study provides a new insight on ecology of this key copepod of marine ecosystems across the globe, and thus confirm the Climatic Variability Hypothesis assuming that natural selection favour species with such flexible adaptive traits as O. similis.

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