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Variation in Size and Growth of the Great Scallop Pecten maximus along a Latitudinal Gradient

Chauvaud, Laurent; Patry, Yann; Jolivet, Aurelie; Cam, Emmanuelle; Le Goff, Clement; Strand, Øivind; Charrier, Gregory; Thebault, Julien; Lazure, Pascal; Gotthard, Karl; Clavier, Jacques
Journal article, Peer reviewed
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journal.pone.0037717.pdf (860.2Kb)
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http://hdl.handle.net/11250/109265
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2012-05-23
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Originalversjon
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0037717
Sammendrag
Understanding the relationship between growth and temperature will aid in the evaluation of thermal stress and threats to

ectotherms in the context of anticipated climate changes. Most Pecten maximus scallops living at high latitudes in the

northern hemisphere have a larger maximum body size than individuals further south, a common pattern among many

ectotherms. We investigated differences in daily shell growth among scallop populations along the Northeast Atlantic coast

from Spain to Norway. This study design allowed us to address precisely whether the asymptotic size observed along a

latitudinal gradient, mainly defined by a temperature gradient, results from differences in annual or daily growth rates, or a

difference in the length of the growing season. We found that low annual growth rates in northern populations are not due

to low daily growth values, but to the smaller number of days available each year to achieve growth compared to the south.

We documented a decrease in the annual number of growth days with age regardless of latitude. However, despite initially

lower annual growth performances in terms of growing season length and growth rate, differences in asymptotic size as a

function of latitude resulted from persistent annual growth performances in the north and sharp declines in the south. Our

measurements of daily growth rates throughout life in a long-lived ectothermic species provide new insight into spatiotemporal

variations in growth dynamics and growing season length that cannot be accounted for by classical growth

models that only address asymptotic size and annual growth rate.
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PLoS ONE
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PLoS ONE

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