Projecting effects of climate change on marine systems: is the mean all that matters?

Proc Biol Sci

Biologische Anstalt Helgoland, Alfred-Wegener-Institut, Helmholtz Zentrum für Polar- und Meeresforschung, Postfach 180, Helgoland 27483, Germany School of Engineering and Science, Jacobs University Bremen, Campus Ring 1, Bremen 28759, Germany.

Published: January 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Studies on global temperature impacts often focus on annual mean temperatures, which may not reflect actual temperature experiences in areas with significant seasonal variation.
  • In Helgoland Roads, a 50-year study shows temperature data has a bimodal distribution, with winter averages around 6°C and summer averages around 15°C.
  • The research indicates that many short-lived organisms are adapted to either winter or summer temperatures, with few species thriving during the transition periods of rapid seasonal change.

Article Abstract

Studies dealing with the effects of changing global temperatures on living organisms typically concentrate on annual mean temperatures. This, however, might not be the best approach in temperate systems with large seasonality where the mean annual temperature is actually not experienced very frequently. The mean annual temperature across a 50-year, daily time series of measurements at Helgoland Roads (54.2° N, 7.9° E) is 10.1°C while seasonal data are characterized by a clear, bimodal distribution; temperatures are around 6°C in winter and 15°C in summer with rapid transitions in spring and autumn. Across those 50 years, the temperature at which growth is maximal for each single bloom event for 115 phytoplankton species (more than 6000 estimates of optimal temperature) mirrors the bimodal distribution of the in situ temperatures. Moreover, independent laboratory data on temperature optima for growth of North Sea organisms yielded similar results: a deviance from the normal distribution, with a gap close to the mean annual temperature, and more optima either above or below this temperature. We conclude that organisms, particularly those that are short-lived, are either adapted to the prevailing winter or summer temperatures in temperate areas and that few species exist with thermal optima within the periods characterized by rapid spring warming and autumn cooling.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4795017PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.2274DOI Listing

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