Lipid Content in Arctic Calanus: a Matter of Season and Size

Malin Daase1, Janne Søreide2, Daniela Freese3, Maja K Hatlebakk2, Berge Jørgen1,2, Paul Renaud4, Tove M. Gabrielsen5 and Daniel Vogedes1, (1)UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Department of Arctic and Marine Biology, Tromsø, Norway, (2)The University Centre in Svalbard, Arctic Biology, Longyearbyen, Norway, (3)Alfred Wegener Institute, Bremerhaven, Germany, (4)Akvaplan-niva, Tromso, Norway, (5)UNIS - The University Centre in Svalbard, Department of Arctic Biology, Longyearbyen, Norway
Abstract:
Copepods of the genus Calanus are considered key elements of the marine food chain of the Arctic and North Atlantic. They convert low-energy carbohydrates and proteins of their algae diet into high-energy wax ester lipids. These lipids are accumulated over the productive season and stored in a lipid sac which sustains the organism over long periods without algal food supply, and which makes Calanus spp. an important prey item. Here we investigated what determines the variability in lipid content of overwintering stages and adults of Arctic and North Atlantic Calanus species. Using image analysis of lipid sac area, we have estimated individual lipid content of Calanus species in the waters and fjords of Svalbard (78-81oN). Data were collected all year round, at surface and deep waters and in locations under the influence of either Atlantic or Arctic hydrographic conditions. Lipid content showed stage specific seasonal variability which can be related to life history strategies and the phenology of algae blooms. Depth specific differences in lipid content were only observed at the start of the overwintering period. Our data also demonstrate that species specific differences in lipid content were not as fundamentally different as previously assumed. Rather, based on molecular identification of the species, we show that the lipid content of the Arctic C. glacialis and the Atlantic C. finmarchicus is dependent on size alone, challenging the classical understanding of these two species yielding two distinctly different ecosystem services based upon a difference in lipid content.