4.1 Article

Interactive Effects of Increasing Temperature and Decreasing Oxygen on Coastal Copepods

Journal

BIOLOGICAL BULLETIN
Volume 243, Issue 2, Pages 171-183

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/722111

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration-Northern Gulf of Mexico Ecosystems and Hypoxia Assessment (NOAA-NGOMEX) [NA06NOS4780148, NA09NOS4780198]
  2. National Science Foundation [OCE-0961942, OCE-1259691]
  3. National Academy of Sciences [NAS-2000006418]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Coastal copepods are experiencing changes in species composition and size distribution due to warming water temperatures and deoxygenation. Understanding the combined effects of temperature and dissolved oxygen on coastal copepods is crucial for predicting their future impact on fisheries and biogeochemical cycles.
The copepods of coastal seas are experiencing warming water temperatures, which increase their oxygen demand. In addition, many coastal seas are also losing oxygen because of deoxygenation due to cultural eutrophication. Warming coastal seas have changed copepod species' composition and biogeographic boundaries and, in many cases, resulted in copepod communities that have shifted in size distribution to smaller species. While increases in ambient water temperatures can explain some of these changes, deoxygenation has also been shown to result in reduced copepod growth rates, reduced size at adulthood, and altered species composition. In this review we focus on the interactive effects of temperature and dissolved oxygen on pelagic copepods, which dominate coastal zooplankton communities. The uniformity in ellipsoidal shape, the lack of external oxygen uptake organs, and the pathway of oxygen uptake through the copepod's integument make calanoid copepods ideal candidates for testing the use of an allometric approach to predict copepod size with increasing water temperatures and decreasing oxygen in coastal seas. Considering oxygen and temperature as a combined and interactive driver in coastal ecosystemswill provide a unifying approach for future predictions of coastal copepod communities and their impact on fisheries and biogeochemical cycles. Given the prospect of increased oxygen limitation of copepods in warming seas, increased knowledge of the physiological ecology of present-day copepods in coastal deoxygenated zones can provide insights into the copepod communities that will inhabit a future warmer ocean.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.1
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available