Rapid winter warming associated with major shifts in coastal fish communities

A seminar on understanding and predicting climate-driven marine range shifts for the 2021 Ecological Society of Australia Conference

By Nicholas Clark in talks rstats

December 12, 2021

Abstract

Marine ecosystems are under increasing threat from warming waters. Winter warming is occurring at a faster rate than summer warming for ecosystems around the world, but most studies focus on the summer. Here, we show that winter warming could affect coastal fish community compositions in the Mediterranean Sea using a model that captures how biotic associations change with sea surface temperature to influence species’ distributions for 215 fish species. Species’ associations control how communities are formed, but the effect of winter warming on associations will be on average four times greater than that of summer warming. Projections using future climate scenarios show that 60% of coastal Mediterranean grid cells are expected to lose fish species by 2040. Heavily fished areas in the west will experience diversity losses that exacerbate regime shifts linked to overexploitation. Incorporating seasonal differences will therefore be critical for developing effective coastal fishery and marine ecosystem management. Clark, N.J., Kerry, J.T. & Fraser, C.I. Rapid winter warming could disrupt coastal marine fish community structure. Nature Climate Change 10, 862–867 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-0838-5

Date

December 12, 2021

Time

2:15 PM – 2:25 PM

Location

Online

Posted on:
December 12, 2021
Length:
0 minute read, 0 words
Categories:
talks rstats
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