Synergistic effects of climate change and local stressors: CO2 and nutrient‐driven change in subtidal rocky habitats

Climate-driven change represents the cumulative effect of global through local-scale conditions, and understanding their manifestation at local scales can empower local management. Change in the dominance of habitats is often the product of local nutrient pollution that occurs at relatively local sc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Russell, BD, Thompson, JI, Falkenberg, LJ, Connell, SD
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2009
Subjects:
CO2
Online Access:http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1418826/
id ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:1418826
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spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:1418826 2023-05-15T17:50:38+02:00 Synergistic effects of climate change and local stressors: CO2 and nutrient‐driven change in subtidal rocky habitats Russell, BD Thompson, JI Falkenberg, LJ Connell, SD 2009 http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1418826/ unknown Global Change Biology , 15 (9) pp. 2153-2162. (2009) carbon dioxide climate change CO2 coralline algae habitat resilience turf-forming algae Article 2009 ftucl 2017-03-30T22:19:46Z Climate-driven change represents the cumulative effect of global through local-scale conditions, and understanding their manifestation at local scales can empower local management. Change in the dominance of habitats is often the product of local nutrient pollution that occurs at relatively local scales (i.e. catchment scale), a critical scale of management at which global impacts will manifest. We tested whether forecasted global-scale change [elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) and subsequent ocean acidification] and local stressors (elevated nutrients) can combine to accelerate the expansion of filamentous turfs at the expense of calcifying algae (kelp understorey). Our results not only support this model of future change, but also highlight the synergistic effects of future CO2 and nutrient concentrations on the abundance of turfs. These results suggest that global and local stressors need to be assessed in meaningful combinations so that the anticipated effects of climate change do not create the false impression that, however complex, climate change will produce smaller effects than reality. These findings empower local managers because they show that policies of reducing local stressors (e.g. nutrient pollution) can reduce the effects of global stressors not under their governance (e.g. ocean acidification). The connection between research and government policy provides an example whereby knowledge (and decision making) across local through global scales provides solutions to some of the most vexing challenges for attaining social goals of sustainability, biological conservation and economic development. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification University College London: UCL Discovery
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language unknown
topic carbon dioxide
climate change
CO2
coralline algae
habitat resilience
turf-forming algae
spellingShingle carbon dioxide
climate change
CO2
coralline algae
habitat resilience
turf-forming algae
Russell, BD
Thompson, JI
Falkenberg, LJ
Connell, SD
Synergistic effects of climate change and local stressors: CO2 and nutrient‐driven change in subtidal rocky habitats
topic_facet carbon dioxide
climate change
CO2
coralline algae
habitat resilience
turf-forming algae
description Climate-driven change represents the cumulative effect of global through local-scale conditions, and understanding their manifestation at local scales can empower local management. Change in the dominance of habitats is often the product of local nutrient pollution that occurs at relatively local scales (i.e. catchment scale), a critical scale of management at which global impacts will manifest. We tested whether forecasted global-scale change [elevated carbon dioxide (CO2) and subsequent ocean acidification] and local stressors (elevated nutrients) can combine to accelerate the expansion of filamentous turfs at the expense of calcifying algae (kelp understorey). Our results not only support this model of future change, but also highlight the synergistic effects of future CO2 and nutrient concentrations on the abundance of turfs. These results suggest that global and local stressors need to be assessed in meaningful combinations so that the anticipated effects of climate change do not create the false impression that, however complex, climate change will produce smaller effects than reality. These findings empower local managers because they show that policies of reducing local stressors (e.g. nutrient pollution) can reduce the effects of global stressors not under their governance (e.g. ocean acidification). The connection between research and government policy provides an example whereby knowledge (and decision making) across local through global scales provides solutions to some of the most vexing challenges for attaining social goals of sustainability, biological conservation and economic development.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Russell, BD
Thompson, JI
Falkenberg, LJ
Connell, SD
author_facet Russell, BD
Thompson, JI
Falkenberg, LJ
Connell, SD
author_sort Russell, BD
title Synergistic effects of climate change and local stressors: CO2 and nutrient‐driven change in subtidal rocky habitats
title_short Synergistic effects of climate change and local stressors: CO2 and nutrient‐driven change in subtidal rocky habitats
title_full Synergistic effects of climate change and local stressors: CO2 and nutrient‐driven change in subtidal rocky habitats
title_fullStr Synergistic effects of climate change and local stressors: CO2 and nutrient‐driven change in subtidal rocky habitats
title_full_unstemmed Synergistic effects of climate change and local stressors: CO2 and nutrient‐driven change in subtidal rocky habitats
title_sort synergistic effects of climate change and local stressors: co2 and nutrient‐driven change in subtidal rocky habitats
publishDate 2009
url http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1418826/
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Global Change Biology , 15 (9) pp. 2153-2162. (2009)
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