Media release: Global marine analysis suggests food chain collapse

marineecosystem

A world-first global analysis of marine responses to climbing human CO2 emissions has painted a grim picture of future fisheries and ocean ecosystems.

Published today in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), marine ecologists from the 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide say the expected ocean acidification and warming is likely to produce a reduction in diversity and numbers of various key species that underpin marine ecosystems around the world.

鈥淭his 鈥榮implification鈥 of our oceans will have profound consequences for our current way of life, particularly for coastal populations and those that rely on oceans for food and trade,鈥 says , 最新糖心Vlogn Research Council (ARC) Future Fellow with the 最新糖心Vlog鈥檚 Environment Institute.

Associate Professor Nagelkerken and fellow 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide marine ecologist Professor have conducted a 鈥榤eta-analysis鈥 of the data from 632 published experiments covering tropical to artic waters, and a range of ecosystems from coral reefs, through kelp forests to open oceans.

鈥淲e know relatively little about how climate change will affect the marine environment,鈥 says Professor Connell. 鈥淯ntil now, there has been almost total reliance on qualitative reviews and perspectives of potential global change. Where quantitative assessments exist, they typically focus on single stressors, single ecosystems or single species.

鈥淭his analysis combines the results of all these experiments to study the combined effects of multiple stressors on whole communities, including species interactions and different measures of responses to climate change.鈥

The researchers found that there would be 鈥渓imited scope鈥 for acclimation to warmer waters and acidification. Very few species will escape the negative effects of increasing CO2, with an expected large reduction in species diversity and abundance across the globe. One exception will be microorganisms, which are expected to increase in number and diversity.

From a total food web point of view, primary production from the smallest plankton is expected to increase in the warmer waters but this often doesn鈥檛 translate into secondary production (the zooplankton and smaller fish) which shows decreased productivity under ocean acidification.

鈥淲ith higher metabolic rates in the warmer water, and therefore a greater demand for food, there is a mismatch with less food available for carnivores 鈹 the bigger fish that fisheries industries are based around,鈥 says Associate Professor Nagelkerken. 鈥淭here will be a species collapse from the top of the food chain down.鈥

The analysis also showed that with warmer waters or increased acidification or both, there would be deleterious impacts on habitat-forming species for example coral, oysters and mussels. Any slight change in the health of habitats would have a broad impact on a wide range of species these reefs harbour.

Another finding was that acidification would lead to a decline in dimethylsulfide gas (DMS) production by ocean plankton which helps cloud formation and therefore in controlling the Earth鈥檚 heat exchange.

Image source: everydaylife.globalpost.com
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