Authors
Jacqueline L Maud, Angus Atkinson, Andrew G Hirst, Penelope K Lindeque, Claire E Widdicombe, Rachel A Harmer, Andrea J McEvoy, Denise G Cummings
Publication date
2015/9/1
Journal
Progress in Oceanography
Volume
137
Pages
513-523
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
Calanus helgolandicus is a key copepod of the NE Atlantic and fringing shelves, with a distribution that is expanding northwards with oceanic warming. The Plymouth L4 site has warmed over the past 25-years, and experiences large variations in the timing and availability of food for C. helgolandicus. Here we examine the degree to which these changes translate into variation in reproductive output and subsequently C. helgolandicus population size. Egg production rates (eggs female−1 day−1) were maximal in the spring to early-summer period of diatom blooms and high ciliate abundance, rather than during the equally large autumn blooms of autotrophic dinoflagellates. Egg hatch success was lower in spring however, with a greater proportion of naupliar deformities then also. Both the timing and the mean summer abundance of C. helgolandicus (CI–CVI) reflected those of spring total reproductive output …
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