Smooth and Spiky: The Importance of Variability in Marine Climate Change Ecology

被引:4
作者
Witman, Jon D. [1 ]
Pershing, Andrew J. [2 ]
Bruno, John F. [3 ]
机构
[1] Brown Univ, Dept Ecol Evolut & Organismal Biol, Providence, RI 02912 USA
[2] Climate Cent, Princeton, NJ USA
[3] Univ North Carolina Chapel Hill, Dept Biol, Chapel Hill, NC USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
heatwave; mean; variability; depth refuge; acclimation; legacy effects; CUMULATIVE IMPACT; CORAL; BIODIVERSITY; HABITAT; REEFS; DISTURBANCE; ADAPTATION; MECHANISMS; HEATWAVES; RESPONSES;
D O I
10.1146/annurev-ecolsys-022323-082123
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Greenhouse gas emissions are warming the ocean with profound consequences at all levels of organization, from organismal rates to ecosystem processes. The proximate driver is an interplay between anthropogenic warming (the trend) and natural fluctuations in local temperature. These two properties cause anomalously warm events such as marine heatwaves to occur with increasing frequency and magnitude. Because warming and variance are not uniform, there is a large degree of geographic variation in temporal temperature variability. We review the underappreciated interaction between trend and variance in the ocean and how it modulates ecological responses to ocean warming. For example, organisms in more thermally variable environments are often more acclimatized and/or adapted to temperature extremes and are thus less sensitive to anthropogenic heatwaves. Considering both trend and variability highlights the importance of processes like legacy effects and extinction debt that influence the rate of community transformation.
引用
收藏
页码:129 / 149
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Joint Effects of Marine Intrusion and Climate Change on the Mexican Avifauna [J].
Peterson, A. Townsend ;
Navarro-Sigueenza, Adolfo G. ;
Li, Xingong .
ANNALS OF THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN GEOGRAPHERS, 2010, 100 (04) :908-916
[22]   Climate change over the Mediterranean and current destruction of marine ecosystem [J].
Kim, Go-Un ;
Seo, Kyong-Hwan ;
Chen, Deliang .
SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, 2019, 9 (1)
[23]   Climate change undermines the global functioning of marine food webs [J].
du Pontavice, Hubert ;
Gascuel, Didier ;
Reygondeau, Gabriel ;
Maureaud, Aurore ;
Cheung, William W. L. .
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2020, 26 (03) :1306-1318
[24]   The dynamics of vulnerability: why adapting to climate variability will not always prepare us for climate change [J].
Dilling, Lisa ;
Daly, Meaghan E. ;
Travis, William R. ;
Wilhelmi, Olga V. ;
Klein, Roberta A. .
WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-CLIMATE CHANGE, 2015, 6 (04) :413-425
[25]   Farmer's response to climate change and variability in Ethiopia: A review [J].
Gezie, Melese .
COGENT FOOD & AGRICULTURE, 2019, 5 (01)
[26]   Climate change impacts on seabirds and marine mammals: The importance of study duration, thermal tolerance and generation time [J].
Orgeret, Florian ;
Thiebault, Andrea ;
Kovacs, Kit M. ;
Lydersen, Christian ;
Hindell, Mark A. ;
Thompson, Sarah Ann ;
Sydeman, William J. ;
Pistorius, Pierre A. .
ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2022, 25 (01) :218-239
[27]   Global change and the importance of fire for the ecology and evolution of insects [J].
Koltz, Amanda M. ;
Burkle, Laura A. ;
Pressler, Yamina ;
Dell, Jane E. ;
Vidal, Mayra C. ;
Richards, Lora A. ;
Murphy, Shannon M. .
CURRENT OPINION IN INSECT SCIENCE, 2018, 29 :110-116
[28]   Internal variability effect doped by climate change drove the 2023 marine heat extreme in the North Atlantic [J].
Guinaldo, Thibault ;
Cassou, Christophe ;
Sallee, Jean-Baptiste ;
Line, Aurelien .
COMMUNICATIONS EARTH & ENVIRONMENT, 2025, 6 (01)
[29]   Non-traditional data and innovative methods for autumn climate change ecology [J].
Buntgen, Ulf ;
Krusic, Paul J. .
CLIMATE RESEARCH, 2018, 75 (03) :215-220
[30]   Integrating within-species variation in thermal physiology into climate change ecology [J].
Bennett, Scott ;
Duarte, Carlos M. ;
Marba, Nuria ;
Wernberg, Thomas .
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2019, 374 (1778)