Combined effects of global climate change and regional ecosystem drivers on an exploited marine food web

2013 ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Susa Niiranen ◽  
Johanna Yletyinen ◽  
Maciej T. Tomczak ◽  
Thorsten Blenckner ◽  
Olle Hjerne ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 239-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yun-Ho Kang ◽  
Se-Jong Ju ◽  
Young-Gyu Park

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Isidora Ávila-Thieme ◽  
Derek Corcoran ◽  
Alejandro Pérez-Matus ◽  
Evie A. Wieters ◽  
Sergio A. Navarrete ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTTop-down and bottom-up forces determine ecosystem function and dynamics. Fisheries as a top-down force can shorten and destabilize food-webs, while climate-change driven effects can alter the bottom-up forces of primary productivity. We assessed the response of a highly-resolved intertidal food-web to these two global-change drivers, using network analysis and bioenergetic modelling. We quantified the relative importance of artisanal fisheries as another predator species, and evaluated the independent and combined effects of fisheries and plankton-productivity changes on food-web dynamics. The food-web was robust to the loss of all harvested species but sensible to plankton-productivity decline. Interestingly, fisheries dampened the negative impacts of decreasing plankton productivity on non-harvested species, while plankton-productivity decline increased the sensitivity of harvested species to fishing. Our results show that strategies for new scenarios caused by climate change are needed to protect marine ecosystems and the wellbeing of local communities dependent on their resources.


Author(s):  
Timothy J Bartley ◽  
Kevin S McCann ◽  
Carling Bieg ◽  
Kévin Cazelles ◽  
Monica Granados ◽  
...  

Climate change is asymmetrically altering environmental conditions in space, from local to global scales, creating novel heterogeneity. Here, we argue that this novel heterogeneity will drive mobile generalist consumer species to rapidly respond through their behavior in ways that broadly and predictably reorganize—or rewire—food webs. We use existing theory and data from diverse ecosystems to show that the rapid behavioral responses of generalists to climate change rewire food webs in two distinct and critical ways. Firstly, mobile generalist species are redistributing into systems where they were previously absent and foraging on new prey, resulting in topological rewiring—a change in the patterning of food webs due to the addition or loss of connections. Secondly, mobile generalist species, which navigate between habitats and ecosystems to forage, will shift their relative use of differentially altered habitats and ecosystems, causing interaction strength rewiring—changes that reroute energy and carbon flows through existing food web connections and alter the food web’s interaction strengths. We then show that many species with shared traits can exhibit unified aggregate behavioral responses to climate change, which may allow us to understand the rewiring of whole food webs. We end by arguing that generalists’ responses present a powerful and underutilized approach to understand and predict the consequences of climate change and may serve as much-needed early warning signals for monitoring the looming impacts of global climate change on entire ecosystems.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Isidora Ávila-Thieme ◽  
Derek Corcoran ◽  
Alejandro Pérez-Matus ◽  
Evie A. Wieters ◽  
Sergio A. Navarrete ◽  
...  

AbstractTop-down and bottom-up forces determine ecosystem function and dynamics. Fisheries as a top-down force can shorten and destabilize food webs, while effects driven by climate change can alter the bottom-up forces of primary productivity. We assessed the response of a highly-resolved intertidal food web to these two global change drivers, using network analysis and bioenergetic modelling. We quantified the relative importance of artisanal fisheries as another predator species, and evaluated the independent and combined effects of fisheries and changes in plankton productivity on food web dynamics. The food web was robust to the loss of all harvested species but sensitive to the decline in plankton productivity. Interestingly, fisheries dampened the negative impacts of decreasing plankton productivity on non-harvested species by reducing the predation pressure of harvested consumers on non-harvested resources, and reducing the interspecific competition between harvested and non-harvested basal species. In contrast, the decline in plankton productivity increased the sensitivity of harvested species to fishing by reducing the total productivity of the food web. Our results show that strategies for new scenarios caused by climate change are needed to protect marine ecosystems and the wellbeing of local communities dependent on their resources.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (24) ◽  
pp. 13787-13807
Author(s):  
Zujaila Nohemy Qui-Minet ◽  
Jérôme Coudret ◽  
Dominique Davoult ◽  
Jacques Grall ◽  
Miguel Mendez‐Sandin ◽  
...  

PLoS Biology ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. e2003446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hadayet Ullah ◽  
Ivan Nagelkerken ◽  
Silvan U. Goldenberg ◽  
Damien A. Fordham

Author(s):  
Timothy J Bartley ◽  
Kevin S McCann ◽  
Carling Bieg ◽  
Kévin Cazelles ◽  
Monica Granados ◽  
...  

Climate change is asymmetrically altering environmental conditions in space, from local to global scales, creating novel heterogeneity. Here, we argue that this novel heterogeneity will drive mobile generalist consumer species to rapidly respond through their behavior in ways that broadly and predictably reorganize—or rewire—food webs. We use existing theory and data from diverse ecosystems to show that the rapid behavioral responses of generalists to climate change rewire food webs in two distinct and critical ways. Firstly, mobile generalist species are redistributing into systems where they were previously absent and foraging on new prey, resulting in topological rewiring—a change in the patterning of food webs due to the addition or loss of connections. Secondly, mobile generalist species, which navigate between habitats and ecosystems to forage, will shift their relative use of differentially altered habitats and ecosystems, causing interaction strength rewiring—changes that reroute energy and carbon flows through existing food web connections and alter the food web’s interaction strengths. We then show that many species with shared traits can exhibit unified aggregate behavioral responses to climate change, which may allow us to understand the rewiring of whole food webs. We end by arguing that generalists’ responses present a powerful and underutilized approach to understand and predict the consequences of climate change and may serve as much-needed early warning signals for monitoring the looming impacts of global climate change on entire ecosystems.


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