There is an urgent need to understand the effects of climatic variability on species'
distributions. This thesis uses an integrative approach to identify and explain the
changes in geographical distribution of two rocky intertidal, warm water species of trochid gastropod, Osilinus lineatus (da Costa) and Gibbula umbiiicalis (da Costa)
that have occurred since the onset of rapid climate warming in the mid-1980s. The
potential physiological mechanisms causing the range shifts are examined, and the effects on population dynamics quantified.
I resurveyed sites in Britain and northern France previously surveyed by Southward &
Crisp (1950s), Hawthorne (1960s) and Kendall, Williamson & Lewis (1970s and
1980s) to record the current north and east distributional limits of Osilinus lineatus
and Gibbula umbilicalis between 2002-2004. The range of O. lineatus had extended
north by 100km and east by 55km since 1986, and G. umbilicalis had extended its
northern limits by 85km since 1985. Concordant increases in abundance had
occurred in both species across all quantitative survey sites between 1985/6 and
2002-2004. Studies of the effects of increased sea temperatures on gonad
development and spawning were run concurrently in the field and the laboratory. The
reproductive cycle occurred 2 months earlier in all field populations studied over a
distance of 4° latitude during the warmer years of 2003 and 2004, compared to
studies made in the cooler 1960s and 1980s. No gonad re-maturation was observed
in field or laboratory populations. Analyses of 0, lineatus and G. umbilicalis
population data from the 1970s, 1980s and 2000s showed that recruitment success
had increased as winter sea temperatures had warmed. Field and laboratory studies
of survival and growth of newly settled recruits was positively related to sea
temperature, with greater survival at increased winter temperatures. Plasticity in the
timing of the reproductive cycle and increased recruitment success in response to
increased sea temperatures are suggested as the physiological mechanisms driving
range extensions in O. lineatus and G. umbilicalis during the current period of rapid
climate warming
Date of Award | 2005 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Changes In the biogeographic distribution of the trochid gastropods Osilinus lineatus (da Costa) and Gibbula umbilicalis (da Costa) in response to global climate change: range dynamics and physiological mechanisms
MIESZKOWSKA, N. (Author). 2005
Student thesis: PhD