Ecological complexity buffers the impacts of future climate on marine consumers

Ecological complexity represents a network of interacting components that either propagate or counter the effects of environmental change on individuals and communities. Yet, our understanding of the ecological imprint of ocean acidification (elevated CO₂) and climate change (elevated temperature) i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature Climate Change
Main Authors: Goldenberg, S., Nagelkerken, I., Marangon, E., Bonnet, A., Ferreira, C., Connell, S.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer Nature 2018
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2440/111579
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-018-0086-0
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Summary:Ecological complexity represents a network of interacting components that either propagate or counter the effects of environmental change on individuals and communities. Yet, our understanding of the ecological imprint of ocean acidification (elevated CO₂) and climate change (elevated temperature) is largely based on reports of negative effects on single species in simplified laboratory systems. By combining a large mesocosm experiment with a global meta-analysis, we reveal the capacity of consumers (fish and crustaceans) to resist the impacts of elevated CO₂. While individual behaviours were impaired by elevated CO₂, consumers could restore their performances in more complex environments that allowed for compensatory processes. Consequently, consumers maintained key traits such as foraging, habitat selection and predator avoidance despite elevated CO₂ and sustained their populations. Our observed increase in risk-taking under elevated temperature, however, predicts greater vulnerability of consumers to predation. Yet, CO₂ as a resource boosted the biomass of consumers through species interactions and may stabilize communities by countering the negative effects of elevated temperature. We conclude that compensatory dynamics inherent in the complexity of nature can buffer the impacts of future climate on species and their communities. Silvan U. Goldenberg, Ivan Nagelkerken, Emma Marangon, Angélique Bonnet, Camilo M. Ferreira and Sean D. Connell