Abstract

SummaryThe tendency of ectotherms to get larger in the cold (Bergmann clines) has potentially great implications for individual performance and food web dynamics. The mechanistic drivers of this trend are not well understood, however. One fundamental question is to which extent variation in body size is attributed to variation in cell size, which again is related to genome size. In this study, we analyzed body and genome size in four species of marine calanoid copepods, Calanus finmarchicus, C. glacialis, C. hyperboreus and Paraeuchaeta norvegica, with populations from both south Norwegian fjords and the High Arctic. The Calanus species showed typical interspecific Bergmann clines, and we assessed whether they also displayed similar intraspecific variations—and if correlation between genome size and body size differed between species. There were considerable inter‐ as well as intraspecific variations in body size and genome size, with the northernmost populations having the largest values of both variables within each species. Positive intraspecific relationships suggest a functional link between body and genome size, although its adaptiveness has not been settled. Impact of additional drivers like phylogeny or specific adaptations, however, was suggested by striking divergences in body size – genome size ratios among species. Thus, C. glacialis and C. hyperboreus, had fairly similar genome size despite very different body size, while P. norvegica, of similar body size as C. hyperboreus, had the largest genome sizes ever recorded from copepods. The inter‐ and intraspecific latitudinal body size clines suggest that climate change may have major impact on body size composition of keystone species in marine planktonic food webs.

Highlights

  • Body size is linked to fitness in numerous ways

  • The arctic populations of the three Calanus species showed the same rank in body size as previously described from their respective main areas; that is C. finmarchicus being smallest and C. hyperboreus largest a 2016 The Authors

  • Because measurements of the arctic C. finmarchicus was made on the CV stage, a direct comparison with the adult arctic C. glacialis should be performed with caution

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Summary

Introduction

Body size is linked to fitness in numerous ways. Several indirect effects may be important, such a sexual selection, predation and resource availability. Central in life history theory are the direct effects of body size on fecundity on one hand, and on time and energy requirement needed to reach maturity on the other (Stearns 1992), and the trade-off between size and age at maturity (Roff 1981; Stearns and Koella 1986). Causations for Bergmann clines appear quite complex, and may vary among species (Watt et al 2010; Forster et al 2012; Hessen et al 2013) It will partly represent phenotypic plasticity, with animals tending to reach larger size at maturity with decreasing developmental temperatures, and reflect genotypic differences

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