Ocean acidification as a driver of community simplification via the collapse of higher-order and rise of lower-order consumers

Increasing oceanic uptake of CO₂ is predicted to drive ecological change as both a resource (i.e. CO₂ enrichment on primary producers) and stressor (i.e. lower pH on consumers). We use the natural ecological complexity of a CO₂ vent (i.e. a seagrass system) to assess the potential validity of concep...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Scientific Reports
Main Authors: Vizzini, S., Martinez-Crego, B., Andolina, C., Massa-Gallucci, A., Connell, S., Gambi, M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2440/107221
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-03802-w
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Summary:Increasing oceanic uptake of CO₂ is predicted to drive ecological change as both a resource (i.e. CO₂ enrichment on primary producers) and stressor (i.e. lower pH on consumers). We use the natural ecological complexity of a CO₂ vent (i.e. a seagrass system) to assess the potential validity of conceptual models developed from laboratory and mesocosm research. Our observations suggest that the stressor-effect of CO₂ enrichment combined with its resource-effect drives simplified food web structure of lower trophic diversity and shorter length. The transfer of CO₂ enrichment from plants to herbivores through consumption (apparent resource-effect) was not compensated by predation, because carnivores failed to contain herbivore outbreaks. Instead, these higher-order consumers collapsed (apparent stressor-effect on carnivores) suggesting limited trophic propagation to predator populations. The dominance of primary producers and their lower-order consumers along with the loss of carnivores reflects the duality of intensifying ocean acidification acting both as resource-effect (i.e. bottom-up control) and stressor-effect (i.e. top-down control) to simplify community and trophic structure and function. This shifting balance between the propagation of resource enrichment and its consumption across trophic levels provides new insights into how the trophic dynamics might stabilize against or propagate future environmental change. S. Vizzini, B. Martínez-Crego, C. Andolina, A. Massa-Gallucci, S.D. Connell, M.C. Gambi