Consequences of fall warming for zooplankton overwintering success
Abstract:
Increased temperatures in fall as predicted by recent
climate models will have important consequences for the overwintering
strategies and seasonal phenologies of organisms in temperate lakes.
We compare fall thermal responses of species representatives of the
copepod Epischura lacustris and the cladoceran Daphnia catawba. Daily
temperatures and weekly population densities were measured in a lake
where these species co-occur, and demographic variables for each species
(survival, reproduction, egg hatching, and production of resting stages)
were assessed over a temperature range of 15 to 30 degrees C in the
laboratory. This study provides three types of evidence that the success
of these species could be altered by fall warming events (temperatures
> 15 degrees C). First, resting eggs of E. lacustris could be stimulated
to hatch from the ''seed bank'' in fall. If so, they would be unable
to reach maturity before winter, and the cohort could be lost. Second,
sexually reproducing D. catawba populations in fall could be induced
to switch from sexual to asexual reproduction. This switch could delay
production and reduce the number of ephippial resting eggs. Third, on
the basis of thermal tolerances, E. lacustris is representative of a
species whose geographic range is likely to be altered by warming at
any time. Over the long term, the disruption of overwintering strategies
by warming in fall could be a mechanism that alters the geographic ranges
of species.
Chen CY, Folt CL., LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY 41 (5): 1077-1086 JUL
1996
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