West Greenland ichthyoplankton and how melting glaciers could allow Arctic cod larvae to survive extreme summer temperatures

Climate change is rapidly modifying marine fish assemblages in the Arctic. As fish eggs and larvae have a narrower thermal tolerance than nonreproductive adults, their response to increasing temperatures is likely one of the main drivers of these changes. In this study, we described ichthyoplankton...

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Main Authors: Caroline Bouchard, Agathe Charbogne, Fabienne Baumgartner, Sarah M. Maes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Canadian Science Publishing 2021-03-01
Series:Arctic Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1139/as-2020-0019
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spelling doaj-8629a941d3ac4c6198f51abaffe861c92021-09-27T19:54:54ZengCanadian Science PublishingArctic Science2368-74602021-03-017121723910.1139/as-2020-0019West Greenland ichthyoplankton and how melting glaciers could allow Arctic cod larvae to survive extreme summer temperaturesCaroline Bouchard0Agathe Charbogne1Fabienne Baumgartner2Sarah M. Maes3Greenland Climate Research Centre, Greenland Institute of Natural Resources, Nuuk 3900, Greenland.Mediterranean Institute of Oceanography, Aix-Marseille Université, Marseille 13007, France.Department of Biology, University of Zurich, Zürich CH-8006, Switzerland.Laboratory of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Genomics, KU Leuven, Leuven 3000, Belgium.Climate change is rapidly modifying marine fish assemblages in the Arctic. As fish eggs and larvae have a narrower thermal tolerance than nonreproductive adults, their response to increasing temperatures is likely one of the main drivers of these changes. In this study, we described ichthyoplankton assemblages in West Greenland between 62 and 73 °N, during summers 2017–2019, and investigated the relationship between sea surface temperature in the spring and summer and the survival of Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida (Lepechin, 1774)) early life stages over the hatching season. Warm years were associated with partial recruitment failures resulting from thermal stress to the eggs and larvae hatched late in the season. Using past environmental conditions, we forecasted an imminent decline in Arctic cod recruitment in the regions of Uummannaq and Disko Bay. Observations from fjords suggested that glacial meltwater could create a subsurface thermal refuge allowing Arctic cod larvae to survive despite very high summer sea surface temperature (ca. 10 °C). As the Greenland ice sheet is melting at an unprecedented speed, the mechanism underlying the “glacial meltwater summer refuge hypothesis” could curb some of the negative effects of ocean warming on the survival of young Arctic cod in West Greenland and other Arctic fjord systems.https://doi.org/10.1139/as-2020-0019early life stagespolar codboreogadus saidafjordsrecruitment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Caroline Bouchard
Agathe Charbogne
Fabienne Baumgartner
Sarah M. Maes
spellingShingle Caroline Bouchard
Agathe Charbogne
Fabienne Baumgartner
Sarah M. Maes
West Greenland ichthyoplankton and how melting glaciers could allow Arctic cod larvae to survive extreme summer temperatures
Arctic Science
early life stages
polar cod
boreogadus saida
fjords
recruitment
author_facet Caroline Bouchard
Agathe Charbogne
Fabienne Baumgartner
Sarah M. Maes
author_sort Caroline Bouchard
title West Greenland ichthyoplankton and how melting glaciers could allow Arctic cod larvae to survive extreme summer temperatures
title_short West Greenland ichthyoplankton and how melting glaciers could allow Arctic cod larvae to survive extreme summer temperatures
title_full West Greenland ichthyoplankton and how melting glaciers could allow Arctic cod larvae to survive extreme summer temperatures
title_fullStr West Greenland ichthyoplankton and how melting glaciers could allow Arctic cod larvae to survive extreme summer temperatures
title_full_unstemmed West Greenland ichthyoplankton and how melting glaciers could allow Arctic cod larvae to survive extreme summer temperatures
title_sort west greenland ichthyoplankton and how melting glaciers could allow arctic cod larvae to survive extreme summer temperatures
publisher Canadian Science Publishing
series Arctic Science
issn 2368-7460
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Climate change is rapidly modifying marine fish assemblages in the Arctic. As fish eggs and larvae have a narrower thermal tolerance than nonreproductive adults, their response to increasing temperatures is likely one of the main drivers of these changes. In this study, we described ichthyoplankton assemblages in West Greenland between 62 and 73 °N, during summers 2017–2019, and investigated the relationship between sea surface temperature in the spring and summer and the survival of Arctic cod (Boreogadus saida (Lepechin, 1774)) early life stages over the hatching season. Warm years were associated with partial recruitment failures resulting from thermal stress to the eggs and larvae hatched late in the season. Using past environmental conditions, we forecasted an imminent decline in Arctic cod recruitment in the regions of Uummannaq and Disko Bay. Observations from fjords suggested that glacial meltwater could create a subsurface thermal refuge allowing Arctic cod larvae to survive despite very high summer sea surface temperature (ca. 10 °C). As the Greenland ice sheet is melting at an unprecedented speed, the mechanism underlying the “glacial meltwater summer refuge hypothesis” could curb some of the negative effects of ocean warming on the survival of young Arctic cod in West Greenland and other Arctic fjord systems.
topic early life stages
polar cod
boreogadus saida
fjords
recruitment
url https://doi.org/10.1139/as-2020-0019
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