Climate warming enhances polar cod recruitment, at least transiently
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/12097Date
2017-06-27Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Bouchard, Caroline; Geoffroy, Maxime; LeBlanc, Mathieu; Majewski, Andrew; Gauthier, Stéphane; Walkusz, Wojciech; Reist, James D.; Fortier, LouisAbstract
Polar cod (Boreogadus saida) is the dominant forage fish in Arctic seas and the main prey of the ringed seal (Pusa hispida), the beluga (Delphinapterus leucas) and several seabird species. Changes in the abundance of
polar cod will have cascading effects on arctic marine ecosystems. We tested the hypothesis that an earlier
sea ice breakup and warmer sea surface temperatures (SST) in spring-summer result in the higher
recruitment of juvenile polar cod in late summer. The density (number m 2) and biomass (mg m 2) of
age-0 polar cod in August and September, estimated by hydroacoustics over 9 years in 9 areas of the
Canadian Arctic, were negatively correlated to ice breakup week and positively correlated to SST. The timing
of the ice breakup was the main determinant of recruitment, with mean juvenile biomass in
September up to 11 times greater for early breakup (late May) than for late breakup (early
September). Early ice breakup in spring increased juvenile biomass in August and September by allowing
the survival of larvae hatched in winter and spring. Since 1979, ice breakup has occurred earlier by as
much as 9.3 days per decade in some areas. We thus forecast a transient increase in polar cod biomass
over the first part of the present century. Thereafter, the relaxation of extreme climatic conditions in
Arctic seas should harbinger the replacement of the hyper-specialized polar cod by subarctic and boreal
forage fish.