Visual predation risk and spatial distributions of large Arctic copepods along gradients of sea ice and bottom depth

Author:

Langbehn Tom J.12ORCID,Aarflot Johanna M.3ORCID,Freer Jennifer J.4ORCID,Varpe Øystein125ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences University of Bergen Bergen Norway

2. Department of Arctic Biology University Centre in Svalbard Longyearbyen Norway

3. Ecosystem Processes Group, Institute of Marine Research Bergen Norway

4. British Antarctic Survey Cambridge UK

5. Norwegian Institute for Nature Research Bergen Norway

Abstract

AbstractChanges in the community size structure of Arctic copepods toward smaller and less fat individuals or species have been linked to environmental changes. The underpinning mechanisms are, however, poorly understood. We use a two‐step hurdle regression model to analyze spatially resolved, long‐term survey data of the Barents Sea mesozooplankton community along gradients of water mass properties, sea ice, and bottom depth. We test the hypothesis that reduced visual predation, and hence increased survival in dim habitats, explains the distribution of large copepods. We expect the presence and biomass of large copepods to increase with increasing bottom depth and the occurrence of seasonal ice‐cover. The patterns and drivers that emerge from our analysis support our hypothesis: in the Barents Sea large copepods were predominantly found in deep troughs that intersect the shelf south of the polar front, or at shallower depths in seasonally ice‐covered waters northeast of Svalbard. On the banks, large copepods are largely absent whereas smaller copepods appear to survive. Top‐down control provides one plausible explanation for these distributions. Large copepods survive where sea‐ice shades the water or deep habitats permit escape from visual predators through vertical migrations. However, when upwelled onto shallow banks or flushed out from below the ice they are decimated by visual foragers. Therefore, advection and topographic blockage of vertical zooplankton distributions are key mechanisms for the efficient energy transfer and productivity in subarctic and Arctic shelf seas. New prolific foraging grounds may open up for planktivores where the ice‐edge recedes under a changing climate.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

Norges Forskningsråd

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Aquatic Science,Oceanography

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