Dl. Mackas et al., Changes in the zooplankton community of the British Columbia continental margin, 1985-1999, and their covariation with oceanographic conditions, CAN J FISH, 58(4), 2001, pp. 685-702
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences
Journal title
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF FISHERIES AND AQUATIC SCIENCES
A 15-year zooplankton time series collected off southern Vancouver Island (
48-49 degreesN) shows large interannual anomalies of biomass for most major
zooplankton species. Variations within groups of ecologically similar spec
ies have been more extreme (often 10-fold or greater) than the variation in
total biomass (four- to six-fold). For both total biomass and species grou
ps, the zooplankton anomalies develop and persist over time spans of severa
l years and are correlated across a large spatial scale (> 100 km longshore
). One dominant mode of recent zooplankton variation was a 1990-1998 cumula
tive shift to a more "southerly" copepod and chaetognath fauna: order-of-ma
gnitude declines in several species endemic to the Northeast Pacific contin
ental shelf and order-of-magnitude increases of species endemic to the Cali
fornia Current (35-45 degreesN). This trend abruptly reversed in 1999. A se
cond major mode of zooplankton variability consisted of roughly mirror-imag
e fluctuations in the abundance of euphausiids versus subarctic oceanic cop
epods. Zooplankton anomalies were correlated with year-to-year changes in s
everal physical environmental indices. The patterns of covariance suggest t
hat zooplankton community composition responds strongly to ocean climate fl
uctuations and in particular to changing current patterns.