Oysters as sentinels of climate variability and climate change in coastal ecosystems

被引:22
作者
Thomas, Yoann [1 ,4 ]
Cassou, Christophe [2 ]
Gernez, Pierre [1 ]
Pouvreau, Stephane [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nantes, Mer Mol Sante EA 2160, 2 Rue Houssiniere, F-44322 Nantes 3, France
[2] Univ Toulouse, Cerfacs, CNRS, CECI, F-31057 Toulouse, France
[3] IFREMER, UBO, IRD,CNRS,UMR 6539, Lab Sci Environm Marin LEMAR, Site Argenton,11 Presquile Vivier, F-29840 Argenton En Landunvez, France
[4] UMR 6539 IRD UBO Ifremer CNRS, Lab Sci Environm Marin LEMAR, BP70, F-29280 Plouzane, France
关键词
North Atlantic; weather regime; oyster; monitoring network; mortality risk assessment; climate models; RCP scenarios; NORTH-ATLANTIC; CRASSOSTREA-GIGAS; PACIFIC OYSTER; WEATHER REGIMES; TEMPERATURE; ECOLOGY; SEA; COMMUNITY; SALINITY; PATHOGEN;
D O I
10.1088/1748-9326/aae254
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Beyond key ecological services, marine resources are crucial for human food security and socio-economical sustainability. Among them, shellfish aquaculture and fishing are of primary importance but become more vulnerable under anthropogenic pressure, as evidenced by reported mass mortality events linked to global changes such as ocean warming and acidification, chemical contamination, and diseases. Understanding climate-related risks is a vital objective for conservation strategies, ecosystems management and human health. We provide here a comprehensive study of the historical mortality of adult oysters related to observed climate variability along the French Atlantic coast from 1986 to 2015, and we built on this knowledge to develop hindcast and forecast assessments of the oyster mortality risk from 1900 to 2100. We show that mortality events usually occur several months after winters dominated by the occurrence of positive North Atlantic oscillation (NAO+) atmospheric regimes of circulation. We explain the lagged response by the multiseasonal long-lasting imprint of wintertime NAO+ on biological and environmental factors, which partly structure oyster mortality etiology. Very high wintertime seawater temperature anomalies at the interannual timescale, which were mostly attributable to internal climate variability through NAO+ and which led to pronounced mortality over the observed period, are then treated as 'analogs' in a large ensemble of Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change emission scenarios and models in order to anticipate future risks. Without any adaptive process, we provide evidence that actual exceptional mortality is likely to become the norm by similar to 2035, even if global warming is limited to +2 degrees C relative to pre-industrial levels.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 54 条
[1]   Windows of change: temporal scale of analysis is decisive to detect ecosystem responses to climate change [J].
Adrian, Rita ;
Gerten, Dieter ;
Huber, Veronika ;
Wagner, Carola ;
Schmidt, Silke R. .
MARINE BIOLOGY, 2012, 159 (11) :2533-2542
[2]  
Alfaro AC, 2018, AQUACULT, DOI [10.1111/raq.12284, DOI 10.1111/RAQ.12284]
[3]  
[Anonymous], 299 ICES
[4]  
[Anonymous], 2008, SUMMER MORTALITY PAC
[5]  
[Anonymous], 2012, R LANG ENV STAT COMP
[6]   Occurrence and seasonality of Vibrio aestuarianus in sediment and Crassostrea gigas haemolymph at two oyster farms in France [J].
Azandegbe, Afi ;
Gamier, Matthieu ;
Andrieux-Loyer, Francoise ;
Kerouel, Roger ;
Philippon, Xavier ;
Nicolas, Jean-Louis .
DISEASES OF AQUATIC ORGANISMS, 2010, 91 (03) :213-221
[7]   Response of North Atlantic Ocean Circulation to Atmospheric Weather Regimes [J].
Barrier, Nicolas ;
Cassou, Christophe ;
Deshayes, Julie ;
Treguier, Anne-Marie .
JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL OCEANOGRAPHY, 2014, 44 (01) :179-201
[8]  
Barry R.G., 2001, Synoptic and Dynamic Climatology, P620
[9]   Aerosols implicated as a prime driver of twentieth-century North Atlantic climate variability [J].
Booth, Ben B. B. ;
Dunstone, Nick J. ;
Halloran, Paul R. ;
Andrews, Timothy ;
Bellouin, Nicolas .
NATURE, 2012, 484 (7393) :228-U110
[10]   Long-term patterns of an estuarine pathogen along a salinity gradient [J].
Bushek, David ;
Ford, Susan E. ;
Burt, Iris .
JOURNAL OF MARINE RESEARCH, 2012, 70 (2-3) :225-251