Influence of a Thermal Discharge on Parasites of a Cold-Water Flatfish, Pleuronectes americanus, as a Bioindicator of Subtle Environmental Change

2007 ◽  
Vol 93 (5) ◽  
pp. 1227-1230 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. A. Khan ◽  
R. G. Hooper
2019 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 433-448
Author(s):  
T. S. Klyuvitkina ◽  
Ye. I. Polyakova

On the basis of aquatic palynomorph assemblages in sediment cores obtained from the eastern Laptev Sea shelf, major phases of environmental change associated with the last postglacial global sea-level rise can be recognized for the time since 17.5 calendar years BP (cal. ka). It is shown that in the time interval of 17.5–13.0 cal. ka in the western part of the sea there was a very cold-water sea basin with permanent sea-ice cover, 12.3–11.2 cal. ka the outer shelf were characterized by increased precipitation of river-loaded matter in a river-proximal environment of Anabara and Khatanga rivers, and the period of 11.2–7.0 cal ka was marked by enhanced influence of Atlantic water at the Laptev Sea continental margin. Modern-like environments were established in this part of the sea approximately 7.0 cal. ka.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lukas Jonkers ◽  
Michal Kučera

Abstract. The composition of planktonic foraminiferal (PF) calcite is routinely used to reconstruct climate change and variability. However, PF ecology leaves a large imprint on the proxy signal. The seasonal and vertical habitat of planktonic foraminifera (PF) species varies spatially, causing variable offsets from annual mean surface conditions recorded by sedimentary assemblages. PF seasonality changes with temperature in a way that minimises the environmental change that individual species experience. While such habitat tracking could lead to an underestimation of spatial or temporal trends and variability in proxy records, most paleoceanographic studies are based on the assumption of a constant habitat. Although the controls on depth habitat variability are less well constrained, it is not unlikely that habitat tracking also affects PF depth habitat. Despite the implications, the effect of this behaviour on foraminifera proxy records has not yet been formally quantified on a global scale. Here we attempt to characterise the effect of habitat tracking on the amplitude of environmental change recorded in sedimentary PF using core top δ18O data from six species, which we compare to predicted δ18O. We find that the offset from mean annual near-surface δ18O values varies with temperature, with PF δ18O indicating warmer than mean conditions in colder waters (on average by −0.1 ‰ (or 0.4°C) per °C), thus providing a first-order quantification of the degree of underestimation due to habitat tracking. We then use an empirical model to estimate the contribution of seasonality to the observed difference between PF and annual mean δ18O and use the residual Δδ18O to assess trends in calcification depth. Our analysis indicates that in all species calcification depth increases with temperature. Consistent with hydrographic conditions, vertical habitat adjustment is dominant in tropical species, whereas cold-water species mainly changes their seasonality when tracking their "optimum" habitat. Assumptions of constant PF depth or seasonal habitat made when interpreting proxy records are thus invalid. The approach outlined here can be used to account for these effects, enabling more accurate reconstructions and improved data-model comparison.


1983 ◽  
Vol 15 (10) ◽  
pp. 67-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik Neuman

Investigations on the fish fauna have been performed at four thermal power plants in Sweden situated on Lake Mälaren, the Baltic, the Sound and the Kattegatt. The results illustrate effects of thermal discharge in various salinities, from fresh water to above 20‰. The presentation is based on material from several years of test fishing with gill nets and fyke nets. The most common species have been classified as warm- or cold-water fishes on the basis of the catch/temperature relationship. The reactions towards the cooling-water mainly correspond to this grouping. Exceptions due to special hydrographic conditions and to the supply of food are discussed. Shallow bottoms in freshwaters and at the Baltic coast are massively dominated by warm-water species of freshwater origin, while marine cold-water fishes hold a strong position in the higher salinities of the Sound and the coast of the Kattegatt. The effects of thermal discharge upon the species composition are thus demonstrated to increase with the salinity.


2007 ◽  
Vol 274 (1619) ◽  
pp. 1693-1699 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey A Hutchings ◽  
Douglas P Swain ◽  
Sherrylynn Rowe ◽  
James D Eddington ◽  
Velmurugu Puvanendran ◽  
...  

Neither the scale of adaptive variation nor the genetic basis for differential population responses to the environment is known for broadcast-spawning marine fishes. Using a common-garden experimental protocol, we document how larval growth, survival and their norms of reaction differ genetically among four populations of Atlantic cod ( Gadus morhua ). These traits, and their plastic responses to food and temperature, differed across spatial scales at which microsatellite DNA failed to detect population structure. Divergent survival reaction norms indicate that warm-water populations are more sensitive to changes in food, whereas cold-water populations are more sensitive to changes in temperature. Our results suggest that neither the direction nor the magnitude of demographic responses to environmental change need be the same among populations. Adaptive phenotypic plasticity, previously undocumented in marine fishes, can significantly influence the probability of recovery and persistence of collapsed populations by affecting their ability to respond to natural and anthropogenic environmental change.


2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. 2207-2226 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Jonkers ◽  
M. Kučera

Abstract. Shell fluxes of planktonic Foraminifera species vary intra-annually in a pattern that appears to follow the seasonal cycle. However, the variation in the timing and prominence of seasonal flux maxima in space and among species remains poorly constrained. Thus, although changing seasonality may result in a flux-weighted temperature offset of more than 5° C within a species, this effect is often ignored in the interpretation of Foraminifera-based paleoceanographic records. To address this issue we present an analysis of the intra-annual pattern of shell flux variability in 37 globally distributed time series. The existence of a seasonal component in flux variability was objectively characterised using periodic regression. This analysis yielded estimates of the number, timing and prominence of seasonal flux maxima. Over 80% of the flux series across all species showed a statistically significant periodic component, indicating that a considerable part of the intra-annual flux variability is predictable. Temperature appears to be a powerful predictor of flux seasonality, but its effect differs among species. Three different modes of seasonality are distinguishable. Tropical and subtropical species (Globigerinoides ruber (white and pink varieties), Neogloboquadrina dutertrei, Globigerinoides sacculifer, Orbulina universa, Globigerinella siphonifera, Pulleniatina obliquiloculata, Globorotalia menardii, Globoturborotalita rubescens, Globoturborotalita tenella and Globigerinoides conglobatus) appear to have a less predictable flux pattern, with random peak timing in warm waters. In colder waters, seasonality is more prevalent: peak fluxes occur shortly after summer temperature maxima and peak prominence increases. This tendency is stronger in species with a narrower temperature range, implying that warm-adapted species find it increasingly difficult to reproduce outside their optimum temperature range and that, with decreasing mean temperature, their flux is progressively more focussed in the warm season. The second group includes the temperate to cold-water species Globigerina bulloides, Globigerinita glutinata, Turborotalita quinqueloba, Neogloboquadrina incompta, Neogloboquadrina pachyderma, Globorotalia scitula, Globigerinella calida, Globigerina falconensis, Globorotalia theyeri and Globigerinita uvula. These species show a highly predictable seasonal pattern, with one to two peaks a year, which occur earlier in warmer waters. Peak prominence in this group is independent of temperature. The earlier-when-warmer pattern in this group is related to the timing of productivity maxima. Finally, the deep-dwelling Globorotalia truncatulinoides and Globorotalia inflata show a regular and pronounced peak in winter and spring. The remarkably low flux outside the main pulse may indicate a long reproductive cycle of these species. Overall, our analysis indicates that the seasonality of planktonic Foraminifera shell flux is predictable and reveals the existence of distinct modes of phenology among species. We evaluate the effect of changing seasonality on paleoceanographic reconstructions and find that, irrespective of the seasonality mode, the actual magnitude of environmental change will be underestimated. The observed constraints on flux seasonality can serve as the basis for predictive modelling of flux pattern. As long as the diversity of species seasonality is accounted for in such models, the results can be used to improve reconstructions of the magnitude of environmental change in paleoceanographic records.


1998 ◽  
Vol 55 (1) ◽  
pp. 162-169 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria C Casas

Known-age winter flounder (Pleuronectes americanus) larvae were reared in large outdoor mesocosms where the temperatures were <5°C for the first 40 days and increased slowly after this and in field enclosures where the temperature ranged between 12.3 and 19.6°C. In the cold-water group, somatic and otolith growth were suppressed at the low initial temperatures and no increments were visible. After temperatures increased, somatic growth was evident and a variable number of initial narrow increments (0.2-0.6 µm) was observed. As larvae emerged from this initial period of slow growth, they began to develop rapidly and otolith increment widths increased to 1.0-3.0 µm. In contrast, larvae reared at the warmer temperature grew rapidly and laid down daily increments beginning 5 days after hatching.


2015 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 1327-1372 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Jonkers ◽  
M. Kučera

Abstract. Shell fluxes of planktonic foraminifera species vary intra-annually in a pattern that appears to follow the seasonal cycle. However, the variation in the timing and prominence of seasonal flux maxima in space and among species remain poorly constrained. Thus, although changing seasonality may result in a flux-weighted temperature offset of more than 5 °C within a species, this effect is often ignored in the interpretation of foraminifera-based paleoceanographic records. Here we present an analysis of the intra-annual pattern of shell flux variability in 37 globally distributed time series. The existence of a seasonal component in flux variability was objectively characterised using periodic regression. This analysis yielded estimates of the number, timing and prominence of seasonal flux maxima. Over 80% of the flux series across all species showed a statistically significant periodic component, indicating that a considerable part of the intra-annual flux variability is predictable. Temperature appears to be a powerful predictor of flux seasonality, but its effect differs among species. Three different modes of seasonality are distinguishable. Tropical and subtropical species (G. ruber (white and pink varieties), N. dutertrei, G. sacculifer, O. universa, G. siphonifera, P. obliquiloculata, G. menardii, G. rubescens, G. tenella and G. conglobatus) appear to have a less predictable flux pattern with random peak timing in warm waters. In colder waters, seasonality is more prevalent: peak fluxes occur shortly after summer temperature maxima and peak prominence increases. This tendency is stronger in species with a narrower temperature range, implying that warm-adapted species find it increasingly difficult to reproduce outside their optimum temperature range and that with decreasing mean temperature, their flux is progressively focussed into the warm season. The second group includes the temperate to cold-water species Globigerina bulloides, G. glutinata, N. incompta, N. pachyderma, G. scitula, G. calida, G. falconensis, G. theyeri and G. uvula. These species show a highly predictable seasonal pattern with one to two peaks a year, which occur earlier in warmer waters. Peak prominence in this group is independent of temperature. The earlier-when-warmer pattern in this group is related to the timing of productivity maxima. Finally, the deep dwelling G. truncatulinoides and G. inflata show a regular and pronounced peak in winter/spring. The remarkably low flux outside the main pulse may indicate a long reproductive cycle of these species. Overall, our analysis indicates that the seasonality of planktonic foraminifera shell flux is predictable and reveals the existence of distinct modes of phenology among species. We evaluate the effect of changing seasonality on paleoceanographic reconstructions and find that, irrespective of the seasonality mode, the actual magnitude of environmental change will be underestimated. The observed constraints on flux seasonality can serve as the basis for predictive modelling of flux pattern. As long as the diversity of species seasonality is accounted for in such models, the results can be used to improve reconstructions of the magnitude of environmental change in paleoceanographic records.


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