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Timing is Everything
Introduction
A decade-long study on shrimp in the North
Atlantic Ocean shows that climate change might claim yet another
casualty. To survive, the shrimp evolved its mating habits
so that their larvae hatch at the beginning of phytoplankton
blooms during spring. The phytoplanktons are food for the
shrimp. The spring bloom depends on the surface temperatures
and sunlight while the hatching of shrimp larvae is dependent
on the shallow bottom water temperatures. Any abrupt change
in the temperature conditions would lead to disruption of
the synchrony and threaten the shrimp populations. The study,
published in the May 8 issue of Science, suggests that shrimp
could serve as early indicators of changing climate.
Source: Down
To Earth, May 2009

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