MAPS, F., J.A. RUNGE, A. LEISING, A.J. PERSHING, N.R. RECORD, S. PLOURDE, J.J. PIERSON, 2012. Modelling the timing and duration of dormancy in populations of Calanus finmarchicus from the Northwest Atlantic shelf. J. Plankton Res., 34(1): 36-54 .
[Résumé disponible seulement en anglais]
Calanus finmarchicus relies on dormancy to thrive in the seasonal environment of the
boreal Atlantic. The lipid accumulation window (LAW) hypothesis proposes that a
seasonal window of environmental conditions allows developing individuals to store
enough lipids for dormancy to be safely initiated. Successful dormancy requires a
sufficient amount of lipids to fulfil the reduced metabolic demand of the dormant
individual and to sustain the final maturation process. We used a pattern-oriented
modelling approach that implements the LAW hypothesis and employs a genetic
algorithm for parameter estimation, in order to reproduce the observed phenology
and demography of C. finmarchicus populations from the two contrasting regions, the
Gulf of St. Lawrence (GSL) and the Gulf of Maine (GoM) in the northwest Atlantic
shelf. In the GSL, the model reproduced the timing of dormancy, the abundance
and individual condition of late copepodid stages. In the GoM, the model produced
a semi-annual dormancy pattern, as no locally produced individual could last the
6–8 months of dormancy inferred from the available observations. Further testing
requires extending demographic time series, including lipid condition of late copepodid
stages in the GoM, and the implementation of a 3-D modelling framework
that would explicitly address the complex interactions between circulation and
population dynamics of C. finmarchicus over the entire northwest Atlantic shelf.©2012 Oxford University Press