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  • 1
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    In:  EPIC3Journal of experimental marine biology and ecology, 271(2), pp. 121-153
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The goal of this study was to relate the temperature response of all developmental stages and reproductive biology of two congener copepod pairs inhabiting different biogeographic regions to their geographic distribution patterns. Survival of adult females and egg production, embryonic development and hatching success of the genera Centropages and Temora from two stations, in the North Sea and the Mediterranean, were studied in laboratory experiments in a temperature range from 2 to 35°C. Postembryonic development was determined from cohorts raised at temperatures between 10 and 20°C with surplus food. Tolerance limits and optima of female survival, reproduction and development distinguished the northern species C. hamatus and T. longicornis from the southern T. stylifera, while C. typicus, which is found in both regions, was intermediate. Thus, thermal preferences could in part explain distribution patterns of these species. While C. hamatus and the two Temora species showed distinct temperature ranges, C. typicus was able to tolerate different temperature conditions, resulting in its wide distribution range from the subarctic to the tropics. However, the thermal range of a species did not necessarily correlate with the optimal temperatures in the experiments. Egg production and stage development were surprisingly low in T. stylifera, which has a mere southern distribution.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 2
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    In:  EPIC3Dissertation (Universität Oldenburg), 140 p.
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The study investigated the annual life cycles of four copepod species, thereof two congener pairs, which differentiate in their geographical and/or seasonal distribution patterns: (1) Temora longicornis and T. stylifera, (2) Centropages hamatus and C. typicus. T. longicornis occurs farthermost north and has hardly any overlap with its warm-temperate congener T. stylifera. The two Centropages species represent a homologous pair, with the cold-temperate C. hamatus and the southern-intermediate C. typicus. The distribution patterns of these species suggest that temperature is a major factor for copepod population dynamics and distribution. A field study focused mainly on the reproductive strategies of these species, which was related to temperature and phytoplankton concentration at two stations in the North Sea and the Mediterranean, respectively. In the laboratory, demographic parameters were studied in a temperature range from 2 to 35°C.Temperature plays a central role in the life cycles of small calanoid copepods. In the North Sea, T. longicornis was always present, while C. hamatus was absent from the water column in winter. Both species are known to overwinter as resting eggs in the sediment. The presence of C. typicus was irregular there at its northern distribution margin, underlying high interannual variability. The timing of maximum reproductive activity was similar between species and was recorded in spring, except in C. typicus. Significant correlations were obtained between clutch size and prosome length, which in turn was inversely correlated with temperature. Consequently, temperature controlled egg production via its effect on body size at Helgoland Roads, while food probably was not limiting. In contrast, oligotrophy governed copepod life in the Mediterranean, where reproductive rates were considerably lower, but continuous throughout the year in both T. stylifera and C. typicus. However, no statistical relationship between reproduction and food availability or temperature was observed.The laboratory experiments strengthened the assumption that temperature is one important source of interannual and regional variability. The tolerance limits and optima of survival, reproduction and development distinguished the northern species T. longicornis and C. hamatus from the southern T. stylifera, while C. typicus, which is found in both regions, was intermediate. Thus, thermal preferences can in part explain distribution patterns of copepds. C. typicus was able to tolerate different temperature conditions, resulting in its wide distribution range from the subarctic to the tropics.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Thesis , notRev
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Reproduction of the dominant copepods Centropages typicus and Temora stylifera was studied at a permanent station in the Ligurian Sea (NW Mediterranean). Seasonal patterns of egg production, clutch size, egg size and female prosome length were followed from January 1998 to December 1999. Female carbon content and weight-specific egg production were compared in autumn 1998 and spring 1999. Reproductive patterns of C. typicus and T. stylifera were very similar, indicating that reproduction was affected by the same environmental factors. Reproductive activity was highest in autumn in both species and years. A second peak of egg production was observed in early summer, which was less intense in 1999 after a bloom of salps. Egg production rates reached maximal values of 33.5 and 33.3 eggs female-1day-1 and annual means of 10.8 and 11.7 eggs female-1day-1 in Centropages and Temora, respectively. Maximal weight-specific egg production was 0.21 day-1 in both species in November 1998, when female carbon contents were 6.7 (C. typicus) and 12.0 µg C (T. stylifera). No statistical relationship between egg production and food availability or temperature was detected. Reproductive activity did not reflect the seasonal abundance patterns, with C. typicus dominating in spring and T. stylifera in autumn.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2018-02-16
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2022-05-26
    Description: Global records on gelatinous zooplankton for the past 200 years.
    Description: The Jellyfish Database Initiative (JeDI) is a scientifically-coordinated global database dedicated to gelatinous zooplankton (members of the Cnidaria, Ctenophora and Thaliacea) and associated environmental data. The database holds 476,000 quantitative, categorical, presence-absence and presence only records of gelatinous zooplankton spanning the past four centuries (1790-2011) assembled from a variety of published and unpublished sources. Gelatinous zooplankton data are reported to species level, where identified, but taxonomic information on phylum, family and order are reported for all records. Other auxiliary metadata, such as physical, environmental and biometric information relating to the gelatinous zooplankton metadata, are included with each respective entry. JeDI has been developed and designed as an open access research tool for the scientific community to quantitatively define the global baseline of gelatinous zooplankton populations and to describe long-term and large-scale trends in gelatinous zooplankton populations and blooms. It has also been constructed as a future repository of datasets, thus allowing retrospective analyses of the baseline and trends in global gelatinous zooplankton populations to be conducted in the future.
    Description: This project was funded by the National Science Foundation Award OCE-1030149
    Keywords: Jellyfish ; Cnidaria ; Ctenophore ; Medusa ; Salp ; Urochordate ; Tunicate ; Siphonophore ; Gelatinous zooplankton
    Repository Name: Woods Hole Open Access Server
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: text/plain
    Format: text/csv
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