Abstract
Reduction in sea-ice thickness and cover is expected to lead to earlier underwater light penetration and thus earlier onset of the spring bloom and a longer open water production in the Arctic. The goal of this study was to understand how these climate-induced changes in light and food regimes may impact the key zooplankton grazer Calanus glacialis CV. We studied this copepod’s metabolic response to starvation (filtered sea water; FSW) and algal food (Food) under two different light regimes (light vs. dark) when it was in dormancy (diapause) in winter (November) and active in summer (July). Respiration was measured as indicator of metabolism and was measured for 9 days for copepods exposed to: Dark+FSW, Dark+Food, Light+FSW and Light+Food. The in situ respiration in winter was three times lower than in summer. In winter, light was the main factor to increase the copepod’s metabolism to a level comparable with that of active copepods in summer, but respiration only remained high if food was present. In summer, it was the combined effect of light and Food that increased the respiration, although Food seemed more important than light with time. Copepods reduced their metabolism with time when food was absent, regardless of the light regime, probably preparing for diapause. These results suggest that C. glacialis can quickly adapt to a changing light and food regime in the Arctic, being able to wake up from diapause if light and thus food appear and postpone its diapause if the food availability is still favorable.
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Acknowledgments
We want to thank M. Daase, B. Niehoff, K. Bluhme and M. Graeve for their valuable help prior to and during the experiment in 2009, as well as H. C. Eilertsen for providing us with algal cultures. This study was funded by the projects CLEOPATRA I and II: Climate effects on food quality and trophic transfer in the Arctic marginal ice zone (Research Council of Norway, project numbers 178766/S30 and 216537) and Kellfrid og Helge fond (University of Tromsø to NM) and is a contribution to the Arctos Network and ANR-ECOTAB project (11 PDOC 018 01 to NM).
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This article belongs to the special Polar Night issue, coordinated by Ole Jørgen Lønne.
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Morata, N., Søreide, J.E. Effect of light and food on the metabolism of the Arctic copepod Calanus glacialis . Polar Biol 38, 67–73 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-013-1417-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00300-013-1417-2