Interannual size changes of adult Aurelia sp.5 medusae stage in the Marine Protected Area of Mljet Island South Adriatic

Tjasa Kogovsek,J. Molinero,D. Lučić,I. Onofri,Barbara Gangai,Marijana Miloslavić,D. Bonnet,A. Malej

Published 2012 in Acta Adriatica: International Journal of Marine Sciences

ABSTRACT

Aurelia aurita s.l. is the most widespread scyphozoan jellyfish that recurrently appear "en mass" and forms large aggregations mainly in coastal waters, embayments and estuaries. Beside anthropogenic factors controlling jellyfish populations climate change may play an important role. The aim of this study was to assess whether climate-related factors in absence of other anthropogenically induced stressor influence medusae size. We investigated seasonal and interannual changes in the size of Aurelia in a "jelly lake" in the National Park of Mljet Island (Croatia) where minimal human impact on the environment makes the Veliko Jezero a natural mesocosm for understanding the impact of climate change on the Aurelia population. The observed changes suggest Aurelia medusa population response to changing environment, in particular to enhanced temperature, by reduced body sizes. Comparison of Aurelia population dynamics from different regions in the Mediterranean Sea revealed the unique feature of the Veliko Jezero population. Despite the similarity of the environmental windows of medusae occurrences in the Veliko Jezero and regions in the Mediterranean Sea, medusae in the Veliko Jezero are present all year round. It seems that the lake bathymetry enables medusae to vertically migrate to deeper and cooler water layer, avoiding the limiting temperatures developed in the upper layer during the summer. These conditions may prolong the Aurelia medusae life span and together with continuous strobilation support the stability of the Aurelia medusae population all year round.

PUBLICATION RECORD

  • Publication year

    2012

  • Venue

    Acta Adriatica: International Journal of Marine Sciences

  • Publication date

    2012-12-01

  • Fields of study

    Biology, Environmental Science

  • Identifiers

    No identifiers available.

  • External record

    Open on Semantic Scholar

  • Source metadata

    Semantic Scholar

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