Seasonal Production Dynamics of High Latitude Seaweeds in a Changing Ocean: Implications for Bottom-Up Effects on Temperate Coastal Food Webs

As the oceans absorb excess heat and CO2 from the atmosphere, marine primary producers face significant changes to their abiotic environments and their biotic interactions with other species. Understanding the bottom-up consequences of these effects on marine food webs is essential to informing adap...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Bell, Lauren Elizabeth
Other Authors: Kroeker, Kristy J
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3w49n4fv
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt3w49n4fv 2023-08-27T04:11:22+02:00 Seasonal Production Dynamics of High Latitude Seaweeds in a Changing Ocean: Implications for Bottom-Up Effects on Temperate Coastal Food Webs Bell, Lauren Elizabeth Kroeker, Kristy J 2023-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3w49n4fv en eng eScholarship, University of California qt3w49n4fv https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3w49n4fv CC-BY Ecology Climate change Carbonate chemistry macroalgae ocean acidification primary production seasonality Seaweeds etd 2023 ftcdlib 2023-08-07T18:05:14Z As the oceans absorb excess heat and CO2 from the atmosphere, marine primary producers face significant changes to their abiotic environments and their biotic interactions with other species. Understanding the bottom-up consequences of these effects on marine food webs is essential to informing adaptive management plans that can sustain ecosystem and cultural services. In response to this need, this dissertation provides an in-depth consideration of the effects of global change on foundational macroalgal (seaweed) species in a poorly studied, yet highly productive region of our world’s oceans. To explore how seaweeds within seasonally dynamic giant kelp forest ecosystems will respond to ocean warming and acidification, I employ a variety of methods: year-round environmental monitoring using an in situ sensor array, monthly subtidal community surveys, and a series of manipulative experiments. I find that a complementary phenology of macroalgal production currently characterizes these communities, providing complex habitat and a nutritionally diverse energy supply to support higher trophic levels throughout the year. I also find that future ocean warming and acidification will lead to substantial shifts in the phenology, quantity and quality of macroalgal production in these systems. My results suggest that the giant kelp Macrocystis pyrifera may be relatively resilient to the effects of global change in future winter and summer seasons at high latitudes. In contrast, the calcifying coralline algae Bossiella orbigniana and Crusticorallina spp. and the understory kelps Hedophyllum nigripes and Neoagarum fimbriatum will experience a suite of negative impacts, especially in future winter conditions. The resulting indirect effects on macroalgal-supported coastal food webs will be profound, with projected reductions in habitat and seasonal food supply on rocky reefs. Coming at a time of heightened interest in seaweed production potential at high latitudes, this dissertation provides a comprehensive evaluation of the ... Thesis Ocean acidification University of California: eScholarship
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Ecology
Climate change
Carbonate chemistry
macroalgae
ocean acidification
primary production
seasonality
Seaweeds
spellingShingle Ecology
Climate change
Carbonate chemistry
macroalgae
ocean acidification
primary production
seasonality
Seaweeds
Bell, Lauren Elizabeth
Seasonal Production Dynamics of High Latitude Seaweeds in a Changing Ocean: Implications for Bottom-Up Effects on Temperate Coastal Food Webs
topic_facet Ecology
Climate change
Carbonate chemistry
macroalgae
ocean acidification
primary production
seasonality
Seaweeds
description As the oceans absorb excess heat and CO2 from the atmosphere, marine primary producers face significant changes to their abiotic environments and their biotic interactions with other species. Understanding the bottom-up consequences of these effects on marine food webs is essential to informing adaptive management plans that can sustain ecosystem and cultural services. In response to this need, this dissertation provides an in-depth consideration of the effects of global change on foundational macroalgal (seaweed) species in a poorly studied, yet highly productive region of our world’s oceans. To explore how seaweeds within seasonally dynamic giant kelp forest ecosystems will respond to ocean warming and acidification, I employ a variety of methods: year-round environmental monitoring using an in situ sensor array, monthly subtidal community surveys, and a series of manipulative experiments. I find that a complementary phenology of macroalgal production currently characterizes these communities, providing complex habitat and a nutritionally diverse energy supply to support higher trophic levels throughout the year. I also find that future ocean warming and acidification will lead to substantial shifts in the phenology, quantity and quality of macroalgal production in these systems. My results suggest that the giant kelp Macrocystis pyrifera may be relatively resilient to the effects of global change in future winter and summer seasons at high latitudes. In contrast, the calcifying coralline algae Bossiella orbigniana and Crusticorallina spp. and the understory kelps Hedophyllum nigripes and Neoagarum fimbriatum will experience a suite of negative impacts, especially in future winter conditions. The resulting indirect effects on macroalgal-supported coastal food webs will be profound, with projected reductions in habitat and seasonal food supply on rocky reefs. Coming at a time of heightened interest in seaweed production potential at high latitudes, this dissertation provides a comprehensive evaluation of the ...
author2 Kroeker, Kristy J
format Thesis
author Bell, Lauren Elizabeth
author_facet Bell, Lauren Elizabeth
author_sort Bell, Lauren Elizabeth
title Seasonal Production Dynamics of High Latitude Seaweeds in a Changing Ocean: Implications for Bottom-Up Effects on Temperate Coastal Food Webs
title_short Seasonal Production Dynamics of High Latitude Seaweeds in a Changing Ocean: Implications for Bottom-Up Effects on Temperate Coastal Food Webs
title_full Seasonal Production Dynamics of High Latitude Seaweeds in a Changing Ocean: Implications for Bottom-Up Effects on Temperate Coastal Food Webs
title_fullStr Seasonal Production Dynamics of High Latitude Seaweeds in a Changing Ocean: Implications for Bottom-Up Effects on Temperate Coastal Food Webs
title_full_unstemmed Seasonal Production Dynamics of High Latitude Seaweeds in a Changing Ocean: Implications for Bottom-Up Effects on Temperate Coastal Food Webs
title_sort seasonal production dynamics of high latitude seaweeds in a changing ocean: implications for bottom-up effects on temperate coastal food webs
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2023
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3w49n4fv
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation qt3w49n4fv
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3w49n4fv
op_rights CC-BY
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