Twilight struggles: The declining diel vertical migrators in a warming shelf sea
ID:926 Poster Presentation

2025-01-14 16:50 (China Standard Time)

Session:Session 22-Impacts of Climate Change and Human Activity on Ocean Food Production

Abstract
Many zooplankton and fish undertake diel vertical migration to evade predators, spending daylight hours in deeper, darker waters and rising to prey-abundant surface waters at dusk to feed, then descending back to the depths before dawn. The way this seeming routine behavior responds to warming in shelf seas may have a more profound impacts on local ecosystem compared with deep oceans. We have spent three years investigating the vertical migration of various organisms in the East China Sea, utilizing both hydroacoustic and underwater video. It showed that the warming-induced intensified thermocline strength and shallower mixed layer depths present new challenges for vertical migrators, particularly weakly swimming zooplankton. In warming shelf sea, the migration of many organisms is diminished or even completely halted. Using structural equation models, we found that sea surface, bottom temperature, and thermocline strength had significant negative effects on DVM, while sea surface chlorophyll had a positive effect. This overlooked phenomenon of declined DVM in shelf seas may become widespread in various shelf seas with the climate change, and are likely to bring significant consequences on food web structures and biogeochemical cycles in the global coastal ecosystems.
 
Keywords
ocean warming, zooplankton, bioacoustics, vertical migration
Speaker
Lingyun Nie
PhD, Ocean University of China

Author
Lingyun Nie Ocean University of China
Jianchao Li Ocean University of China
Yang Liu Ocean University of China
Peng Sun Ocean University of China
Zhenjiang Ye Ocean University of China
Shuyang Ma Ocean University of China
Wenchao Zhang Ocean University of China
Yongjun Tian Ocean University of China