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Journal ArticleDOI

Spring phenological responses of marine and freshwater plankton to changing temperature and light conditions

TLDR
Meta-analysis confirms the general shift toward earlier blooms at increased temperature in both marine and freshwater systems and supports predictions that effects of climate change on plankton production will vary among sites, depending on resource limitation and species composition.
Abstract
Shifts in the timing and magnitude of the spring plankton bloom in response to climate change have been observed across a wide range of aquatic systems. We used meta-analysis to investigate phenological responses of marine and freshwater plankton communities in mesocosms subjected to experimental manipulations of temperature and light intensity. Systems differed with respect to the dominant mesozooplankton (copepods in seawater and daphnids in freshwater). Higher water temperatures advanced the bloom timing of most functional plankton groups in both marine and freshwater systems. In contrast to timing, responses of bloom magnitudes were more variable among taxa and systems and were influenced by light intensity and trophic interactions. Increased light levels increased the magnitude of the spring peaks of most phytoplankton taxa and of total phytoplankton biomass. Intensified size-selective grazing of copepods in warming scenarios affected phytoplankton size structure and lowered intermediate (20–200 μm)-sized phytoplankton in marine systems. In contrast, plankton peak magnitudes in freshwater systems were unaffected by temperature, but decreased at lower light intensities, suggesting that filter feeding daphnids are sensitive to changes in algal carrying capacity as mediated by light supply. Our analysis confirms the general shift toward earlier blooms at increased temperature in both marine and freshwater systems and supports predictions that effects of climate change on plankton production will vary among sites, depending on resource limitation and species composition.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Phytoplankton response to a changing climate

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review mechanistic links between climate alterations and factors limiting primary production, and highlight studies where climate change has had a clear impact on phytoplankton processes.
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Evolutionary and plastic responses of freshwater invertebrates to climate change: realized patterns and future potential

TL;DR: Experimental thermal evolution experiments and common garden warming experiments associated with space‐for‐time substitutions along latitudinal gradients indicate that besides genetic changes, also phenotypic plasticity and evolution of plasticity are likely to contribute to the observed phenotypesic changes under climate change in aquatic invertebrates.
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Satellite remote sensing of phytoplankton phenology in Lake Balaton using 10 years of MERIS observations

TL;DR: In this paper, a satellite remote sensing approach to retrieve and map freshwater phytoplankton phenology is demonstrated in application to Lake Balaton, Hungary using Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS).
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Temperature increase and fluctuation induce phytoplankton biodiversity loss - Evidence from a multi-seasonal mesocosm experiment.

TL;DR: Investigation of how ambient water temperature, induced increased temperature, and temperature fluctuations change phytoplankton phenology, taxonomical diversity, and community structure found decreased diversity and evenness in the T and F treatments pushed the community toward the dominance of only a few phytopsized taxa that are better adapted to endure warmer and more irregular temperature conditions.
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Life in a warming ocean: thermal thresholds and metabolic balance of arctic zooplankton

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effect of global temperature changes on shifts in ecosystems, from individual size and species composition to global trophic status, and found that temperature-induced mismatch between the positive and negative terms of the metabolic balance appears to depend on precise characteristics of their respective thermal windows, hardly identifiable by the averaging.
References
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Climate change 2007: the physical science basis

TL;DR: The first volume of the IPCC's Fourth Assessment Report as mentioned in this paper was published in 2007 and covers several topics including the extensive range of observations now available for the atmosphere and surface, changes in sea level, assesses the paleoclimatic perspective, climate change causes both natural and anthropogenic, and climate models for projections of global climate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conducting Meta-Analyses in R with the metafor Package

TL;DR: The metafor package provides functions for conducting meta-analyses in R and includes functions for fitting the meta-analytic fixed- and random-effects models and allows for the inclusion of moderators variables (study-level covariates) in these models.
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The meta-analysis of response ratios in experimental ecology

TL;DR: The approximate sampling distribution of the log response ratio is given, why it is a particularly useful metric for many applications in ecology, and how to use it in meta-analysis are discussed.
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