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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Climate driven range shifts are driving the redistribution of marine species and
threatening the functioning and stability of marine ecosystems. For species that are
the structural basis of marine ecosystems, such effects can be magnified into drastic
loss of ecosystem functioning and resilience. Rhodoliths are unattached calcareous
red algae that provide key complex three-dimensional habitats for highly diverse
biological communities. These globally distributed biodiversity hotspots are increasingly
threatened by ongoing environmental changes, mainly ocean acidification and warming,
with wide negative impacts anticipated in the years to come. These are superimposed
upon major local stressors caused by direct destructive impacts, such as bottom
trawling, which act synergistically in the deterioration of the rhodolith ecosystem health
and function. Anticipating the potential impacts of future environmental changes on the
rhodolith biome may inform timely mitigation strategies integrating local effects of bottom
trawling over vulnerable areas at global scales. This study aimed to identify future climate
refugia, as regions where persistence is predicted under contrasting climate scenarios,
and to analyze their trawling threat levels. This was approached by developing species
distribution models with ecologically relevant environmental predictors, combined with
the development of a global bottom trawling intensity index to identify heavily fished
regions overlaying rhodoliths. Our results revealed the importance of light, thermal
stress and pH driving the global distribution of rhodoliths. Future projections showed
poleward expansions and contractions of suitable habitats at lower latitudes, structuring
cryptic depth refugia, particularly evident under the more severe warming scenario
RCP 8.5. Our results suggest that if management and conservation measures are not
taken, bottom trawling may directly threaten the persistence of key rhodolith refugia.
Since rhodoliths have slow growth rates, high sensitivity and ecological importance,
understanding how their current and future distribution might be susceptible to bottom
trawling pressure, may contribute to determine the fate of both the species and their
associated communities.
Description
Keywords
Climate change Ecosystem structuring species Coralligenous reefs Species distribution modeling Coralline algae Distribution shifts
Citation
Publisher
Frontiers Media