Abstract

Calanus finmarchicus is a key secondary producer in the North Atlantic. Shortly prior to the spring bloom the animals ascend from diapause at depth to surface waters, where the females spawn partly, based on winter lipid reserves. C. finmarchicus eggs are an important prey of first feeding fish larvae inhabiting North Atlantic shelves during early spring and are thus essential for larval survival. Comprehensive late April surveys have been carried out on and around the Faroe shelf, which is located between the Northeast Atlantic and the Nordic Seas, for more than two decades. One aim is to investigate the critical match-mismatch between the spring bloom development, zooplankton reproduction and occurrence of first feeding fish larvae. In this study, we examine spatial and temporal changes in pre-bloom reproductive activity of C. finmarchicus on and around the shelf using a unique dataset of more than 8,000 examined females sampled during the period 1997–2020. Enhanced productivity was observed on the north-western side of the shelf, where the main flow of oceanic water to the inner permanently well mixed shelf takes place. We attribute this increased productivity to enhanced food (phytoplankton) availability in the seasonally stratified outer shelf, slightly upstream of the main egg production area. Both individual egg production rates and the fraction of spawning females declined throughout the Faroe shelf during the examined period. This decline could not be explained by the employed environmental parameters. The declining pre-bloom egg production may have consequences for first feeding fish larvae.

Highlights

  • Calanus finmarchicus is a key secondary producer and the most studied copepod species in the North Atlantic, ranging geographically from the Gulf of Maine to the North Sea (Melle et al, 2014)

  • C. finmarchicus eggs are the dominant prey of first feeding cod larvae, which are spawned on the Faroe shelf during February-April (Gaard and Steingrund, 2001; Jacobsen et al, 2020), and they are an important prey in neighboring shelves as well (Heath and Lough, 2007)

  • The main objective of this paper is to explore the prebloom C. finmarchicus egg production on and around the Faroe shelf from 1997 to 2020, and to establish how the prebloom egg production responds to changes in environmental conditions

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Summary

Introduction

Calanus finmarchicus is a key secondary producer and the most studied copepod species in the North Atlantic, ranging geographically from the Gulf of Maine to the North Sea (Melle et al, 2014). C. finmarchicus is an oceanic copepod species, it dominates the zooplankton biomass in Faroese waters (Gaard, 1999). C. finmarchicus eggs are the dominant prey of first feeding cod larvae, which are spawned on the Faroe shelf during February-April (Gaard and Steingrund, 2001; Jacobsen et al, 2020), and they are an important prey in neighboring shelves as well (Heath and Lough, 2007). In late summer in the Northeast Atlantic pre-adult C. finmarchicus copepodites descend to deep waters within the Norwegian Sea gyre and the Atlantic subpolar gyre to overwinter in a resting state known as diapause (e.g., Heath et al, 2000)

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