Temperature control of larval dispersal and the implications for marine ecology, evolution, and conservation
Temperature controls the rate of fundamental biochemical processes
and thereby regulates organismal attributes including development
rate and survival. The increase in metabolic rate with
temperature explains substantial among-species variation in lifehistory
traits, population dynamics, and ecosystem processes.
Temperature can also cause variability in metabolic rate within
species. Here, we compare the effect of temperature on a key
component of marine life cycles among a geographically and
taxonomically diverse group of marine fish and invertebrates.
Although innumerable lab studies document the negative effect of
temperature on larval development time, little is known about the
generality versus taxon-dependence of this relationship. We
present a unified, parameterized model for the temperature dependence
of larval development in marine animals. Because the
duration of the larval period is known to influence larval dispersal
distance and survival, changes in ocean temperature could have
a direct and predictable influence on population connectivity,
community structure, and regional-to-global scale patterns of
biodiversity.
Publication Date: 2007
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