Title: P1252108902wlbZa
1Climate Change and Zooplankton Predator-Prey
Dynamics
Copepods
Comb-jelly
Barbara K. Sullivan, Donna Van Keuren,
University of Rhode Island Supported by
2Temperatures in Narragansett Bay since 1950
increases are evident
NOAA data from Newport RI to 1994 URI Fish Trawl
1995-1999
3Changes in Mnemiopsis spp. distribution in North
America
1950-1979 vs 1999-2002
geographic range expansion
temporal range expansion in Narragansett Bay
4Mnemiopsis gt1 cm appeared earlier and were more
abundant in 1999 than in 1971
0 20 40
Jan Mar May Jul Sep
Nov Dec
Number/m3
1999
0 200 400
1999
Jan Mar May Jul
Sep Nov Dec
5Consequences?
Comb jellies, fish larvae
Zooplankton Phytoplankton
- Increased predation on fish eggs and larvae?
- Depletion of zooplankton stocks in 2000 that fish
eat? - Keller et al. 1999 reported 2 to 4 fold
reductions in fish eggs and larvae since 1972-73
(p lt .05).
6Can we predict the consequences of climate change?
- One species near northern edge of its range has
expanded its seasonal range - With warming will all species simply shift
distribution to earlier in the season? - Will there be a more complicated community
response by zooplankton and phytoplankton?
7 What do the data say? Zooplankton and Comb
jellies no one was keeping track of
zooplankton in the Bay until Sullivan et al.
1999-2002 Could there be big changes being missed
that have important consequences on the rest of
the system?
8Dominant zooplankton and comb jellies -PAST
9Dominant summer zooplankton severely reduced in
2000 and 2001
10And in 2002 and 2003 at multiple stations
11Date of data collection Ratio summer copepod winter copepod Ratio summer copepod winter copepod
Date of data collection Max. abundance Average abundance
1951 Frolander 1.13 0.86
1973 Hulsizer 1.15 0.4
1976 Durbin Durbin 0.99 0.80
2002 Sullivan et al. 0.05 0.03
2003 Sullivan et al. 0.18 0.07
12- Consequences?
- Keller et al. 1999 report 2-4 fold fewer fish
larvae. - Chlorophyll a in summer?
- Less consumed
- More arrive at the bottom?