Mechanistic understanding of the role of diatoms in the success of the Arctic Calanus complex and implications for a warmer Arctic

Lead Research Organisation: University of Stirling
Department Name: Institute of Aquaculture

Abstract

Copepod species of the genus Calanus (Calanus hereafter) are rice grain-sized crustaceans, distant relatives of crabs and lobsters, that occur throughout the Arctic Ocean consuming enormous quantities of microscopic algae (phytoplankton). These tiny animals represent the primary food source for many Arctic fish, seabirds and whales. During early spring they gorge on extensive seasonal blooms of diatoms, fat-rich phytoplankton that proliferate both beneath the sea ice and in the open ocean. This allows Calanus to rapidly obtain sufficient fat to survive during the many months of food scarcity during the Arctic winter. Diatoms also produce one of the main marine omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids that Calanus require to successfully survive and reproduce in the frozen Arctic waters. Calanus seasonally migrate into deeper waters to save energy and reduce their losses to predation in an overwintering process called diapause that is fuelled entirely by carbon-rich fat (lipids). This vertical 'lipid pump' transfers vast quantities of carbon into the ocean's interior and ultimately represents the draw-down of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), an important process within the global carbon cycle. Continued global warming throughout the 21st century is expected to exert a strong influence on the timing, magnitude and spatial distribution of diatom productivity in the Arctic Ocean. Little is known about how Calanus will respond to these changes, making it difficult to understand how the wider Arctic ecosystem and its biogeochemistry will be affected by climate change.

The overarching goal of this proposal is to develop a predictive understanding of how Calanus in the Arctic will be affected by future climate change. We will achieve this goal through five main areas of research:

We will synthesise past datasets of Calanus in the Arctic alongside satellite-derived data on primary production. This undertaking will examine whether smaller, more temperate species have been increasingly colonising of Arctic. Furthermore, it will consider how the timing of life-cycle events may have changed over past decades and between different Arctic regions. The resulting data will be used to validate modelling efforts.

We will conduct field based experiments to examine how climate-driven changes in the quantity and omega-3 content of phytoplankton will affect crucial features of the Calanus life-cycle, including reproduction and lipid storage for diapause. Cutting-edge techniques will investigate how and why Calanus use stored fats to reproduce in the absence of food. The new understanding gained will be used to produce numerical models of Calanus' life cycle for future forecasting.

The research programme will develop life-cycle models of Calanus and simulate present day distribution patterns, the timing of life-cycle events, and the quantities of stored lipid (body condition), over large areas of the Arctic. These projections will be compared to historical data.

We will investigate how the omega-3 fatty acid content of Calanus is affected by the food environment and in turn dictates patterns of their diapause- and reproductive success. Reproductive strategies differ between the different species of Calanus and this approach provides a powerful means by which to predict how each species will be impacted, allowing us to identify the winners and losers under various scenarios of future environmental changes.

The project synthesis will draw upon previous all elements of the proposal to generate new numerical models of Calanus and how the food environment influences their reproductive strategy and hence capacity for survival in a changing Arctic Ocean. This will allow us to explore how the productivity and biogeochemistry of the Arctic Ocean will change in the future. These models will be interfaced with the UK's Earth System Model that directly feeds into international efforts to understand global feedbacks to climate change.

Planned Impact

Copepod species of the genus Calanus (Calanus hereafter) are rice grain-sized crustaceans, distant relatives of crabs and lobsters, that occur throughout the Arctic Ocean consuming enormous quantities of microscopic algae (phytoplankton). These tiny animals represent the primary food source for many Arctic fish, seabirds and whales. During early spring they gorge on extensive seasonal blooms of diatoms, fat-rich phytoplankton that proliferate both beneath the sea ice and in the open ocean. This allows Calanus to rapidly obtain sufficient fat to survive during the many months of food scarcity during the Arctic winter. Diatoms also produce one of the main marine omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids that Calanus require to successfully survive and reproduce in the frozen Arctic waters. Calanus seasonally migrate into deeper waters to save energy and reduce their losses to predation in an overwintering process called diapause that is fuelled entirely by carbon-rich fat (lipids). This vertical 'lipid pump' transfers vast quantities of carbon into the ocean's interior and ultimately represents the draw-down of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2), an important process within the global carbon cycle. Continued global warming throughout the 21st century is expected to exert a strong influence on the timing, magnitude and spatial distribution of diatom productivity in the Arctic Ocean. Little is known about how Calanus will respond to these changes, making it difficult to understand how the wider Arctic ecosystem and its biogeochemistry will be affected by climate change.

The overarching goal of this proposal is to develop a predictive understanding of how Calanus in the Arctic will be affected by future climate change. We will achieve this goal through five main areas of research:

We will synthesise past datasets of Calanus in the Arctic alongside satellite-derived data on primary production. This undertaking will examine whether smaller, more temperate species have been increasingly colonising of Arctic. Furthermore, it will consider how the timing of life-cycle events may have changed over past decades and between different Arctic regions. The resulting data will be used to validate modelling efforts.

We will conduct field based experiments to examine how climate-driven changes in the quantity and omega-3 content of phytoplankton will affect crucial features of the Calanus life-cycle, including reproduction and lipid storage for diapause. Cutting-edge techniques will investigate how and why Calanus use stored fats to reproduce in the absence of food. The new understanding gained will be used to produce numerical models of Calanus' life cycle for future forecasting.

The research programme will develop life-cycle models of Calanus and simulate present day distribution patterns, the timing of life-cycle events, and the quantities of stored lipid (body condition), over large areas of the Arctic. These projections will be compared to historical data.

We will investigate how the omega-3 fatty acid content of Calanus is affected by the food environment and in turn dictates patterns of their diapause- and reproductive success. Reproductive strategies differ between the different species of Calanus and this approach provides a powerful means by which to predict how each species will be impacted, allowing us to identify the winners and losers under various scenarios of future environmental changes.

The project synthesis will draw upon previous all elements of the proposal to generate new numerical models of Calanus and how the food environment influences their reproductive strategy and hence capacity for survival in a changing Arctic Ocean. This will allow us to explore how the productivity and biogeochemistry of the Arctic Ocean will change in the future. These models will be interfaced with the UK's Earth System Model that directly feeds into international efforts to understand global feedbacks to climate change.
 
Title Spectral Chasings_Plankton Style 
Description Audio Visual Theatrical performance in Copenhagen in a water tower as an exhibition space. Performance abstract: Crackling echoes of micro sea insects infiltrate the water tower in Spectral Chasings_Plankton Style. You are invited to quieten down and step into the darkness, to become encircled by zooplankton, specifically copepods .perhaps better known as water fleas. These tiny beings are practically invisible to the naked eye when singled out, yet they live almost everywhere in the oceans in numbers too vast to count - inhabiting the seas in monstrous swarms that can be seen from satellites. They are odd and mysterious creatures. Fierce and strong microscopic individuals who migrate vertically in the oceanic currents. This abstract and intimate sound/light performance pays tribute to their bubbly, ghost-like existence; chasing our eerie cross-species human~flea connections with electro-acoustic reveries and flickering beams. The Spectral Chasings universe is inspired by breakthrough research into plankton's perception of light, actual underwater recordings of copepods and eco-queer speculations. Duration: approx. 40 min. Age recommendation: 16+ Art Direction: Maria Brænder Performers: Brænder & Claus Otto Sound: John Lemke Light: Sofia Ivarsson Costume: Charlotte Bodil Hermansen Supported by the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland, Scottish Association of Marine Science and Brønshøj Vandtårn. Special thanks to: Dr. Kim Last, Saskia Kühn, Paasja Luna, Dr. Laura Bissell & Prof. Alistair MacDonald Photo: Calanus-finmarchicus (Copepod) - Bjørn Henrik Hansen, Senior Researcher at SINTEF Ocean. About Brænder: www.mbraender.com 
Type Of Art Performance (Music, Dance, Drama, etc) 
Year Produced 2023 
Impact This was a theatrical production in Copenhagen with physical visitors (~200). A film was also produced and will be uploaded onto social media (date tbc). 
URL http://www.mbraender.com
 
Description This project has aimed at developing understanding on how key zooplankton species in the Artic might be affected by climate change. In particular, this project has focused on developing analytical tools to characterise the type of lipid these species accumulate, known as wax esters. Lipids are key metabolic energy stores and are useful trophic markers. However, this project has developed technical expertise to analyse in depth intact wax esters in copepod species. This is important because the composition of lipids affects the physical properties of the lipid which in turn dictates buoyancy of copepods when these animals are in diapause. Analytical work optimised in this project works as a stepping stone to explore how future changes in food availability in the Artic might affects carbon fluxes and the reproductive capability of copepods.
Exploitation Route The methods developed during this project are extremely valuable to the academic community working in the Artic. This is shown by the contribution that the methodologies developed have in other research project such as ECOTIP.
Sectors Environment

 
Description European Commission Default Scheme
Amount € 6,311,535 (EUR)
Funding ID 869383 
Organisation European Commission H2020 
Sector Public
Country Belgium
Start 06/2020 
End 05/2024
 
Title Intact wax-ester analysis by supercritical fluid chromatography mass spectrometry 
Description The method was developed to address the need to chemically characterise intact wax-esters, a key lipid component of copepods, and as such could be classified as a technology assay. Traditionally, wax-esters have been studied in a semi-destructive manner by looking at the fatty acids and alcohols separately, though to gain a greater understanding of how intact lipids alter the physical properties of the copepod storage lipids, a supercritical carbon dioxide chromatography separation was used, as this separates lipids by class. Intact wax-esters, as well other neutral lipids, are separated within 10 minutes, with individual intact wax-ester species chromatographically resolved from one another. The SFC approach is coupled to a QTOF, which allows for identification by accurate mass, as well as generation of fragmentation spectra, allowing for fatty acid and alcohol compositional analysis of the intact wax-esters. Development of this method also ties in with the development and utilisation of high pressure differential scanning calorimetry and density measurements, which have also been used by our group. Both these physical characterisation methods, when coupled to the intact chemical profiling method outlined above, allow us to understand how chemical alterations affect the physical properties of lipids, which ultimately may influence copepod diapause. 
Type Of Material Technology assay or reagent 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This research methodology has enabled us collaborate with other research groups and consortiums, including the EU Horizon 2020 funded ECOTIP project, application for a NERC DTP studentship with the University of Exeter, and further collaboration with the University of Exeter and National Oceanographic Centre. 
 
Description Participation in the EU-funded project ECOTIP (https://ecotip-arctic.eu/) 
Organisation Technical University of Denmark
Department National Institute of Aquatic Resources
Country Denmark 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Our contribution is in developing and analysing lipid composition (wax esters and triacylglycerols) in copepod species in more detail that has been previously achieved using traditional methods. We are also providing data into the impact that lipid composition have on buoyancy which is critical to determine depth during diapause.
Collaborator Contribution Partners have expertise in copepod biology and ecology especially in the Artic.
Impact Abstract 'Where to overwinter? - Calanus hyperboreus lipid composition and its implications' - ASLO Aquatic Sciences Meeting 2023 Other outputs to follow
Start Year 2020