Response of copepod communities to sea warming in three time-series across the North Atlantic and Mediterranean Sea
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Date
2020-02-20Author
Villarino Prado, Ernesto
Irigoien, Xabier
Villate Guinea, Luis Fernando
Iriarte Gabicagogeascoa, María Aranzazu
Uriarte Capetillo, Ibon
Zervoudaki, Soultana
Carstensen, Jacob
O´Brien, T.
Chust Peters, Guillem
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Marine Ecology Progress Series 636 : 47-61 (2020)
Abstract
The rapid warming of the world’s oceans during the last few decades has affected
distributional patterns of marine planktonic communities. Here, we analyse links between sea
warming and changes in copepod community composition over the last 3 decades (1980−2012).
We used zooplankton time-series data which included 79 species of copepods collected at 3 sites
in the eastern North Atlantic (Bay of Biscay and the Kattegat Sea) and the Mediterranean Sea
(Gulf of Saronikos). First, using community β-diversity metrics, we analysed temporal patterns of
copepod community composition changes over time and its relation to local environmental
conditions. Second, to test whether the changes in copepod community composition correspond to
community thermal preferences, we used the community temperature index (CTI) and compared
CTI interannual changes with local temperature trends. The β-diversity analysis reveals a high
temporal turnover in the copepod community composition at the 3 sites (30−45%), with a significant
similarity decrease over time (‘decay’) associated with both niche descriptors and demographic
stochastic processes. CTI results reveal that both in the Kattegat and Saronikos, where the
ocean warming rate was the highest amongst sites, copepod community changes are linked to
temperature variability, suggesting that the community is tracking their thermal niche over time.
Our findings unveil the fundamental role of abiotic factors structuring copepod biodiversity over
time and reveal that the local velocity of ocean warming and the species thermal thresholds are
key to rearranging copepod community composition in coastal ecosystems.