Data from: Diversity in thermal affinity among key piscivores buffers impacts of ocean warming on predator-prey interactions

Asymmetries in responses to climate change have the potential to alter important predator-prey interactions, in part by altering the location and size of spatial refugia for prey. We evaluated the effect of ocean warming on interactions between four important piscivores and four of their prey in the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Selden, Rebecca L., Batt, Ryan D., Saba, Vincent S., Pinsky, Malin L.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2018
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.761tj
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Summary:Asymmetries in responses to climate change have the potential to alter important predator-prey interactions, in part by altering the location and size of spatial refugia for prey. We evaluated the effect of ocean warming on interactions between four important piscivores and four of their prey in the U.S. Northeast Shelf by examining species overlap under historical conditions (1968-2014) and with a doubling in CO2. Because both predator and prey shift their distributions in response to changing ocean conditions, the net impact of warming or cooling on predator-prey interactions was not determined a priori from the range extent of either predator or prey alone. For Atlantic cod, an historically dominant piscivore in the region, we found that both historical and future warming led to a decline in the proportion of prey species' range it occupied and caused a potential reduction in its ability to exert top-down control on these prey. In contrast, the potential for overlap of spiny dogfish with prey species was enhanced by warming, expanding their importance as predators in this system. In sum, the decline in the ecological role for cod that began with overfishing in this ecosystem will likely be exacerbated by warming, but this loss may be counteracted by the rise in dominance of other piscivores with contrasting thermal preferences. Functional diversity in thermal affinity within the piscivore guild may therefore buffer against the impact of warming on marine ecosystems, suggesting a novel mechanism by which diversity confers resilience. Observed and modeled presence 1968-2014 NMFS Trawl Survey data used to fit species distribution models and the resulting modeled predictions for presence/absence (preds1) and abundance (preds). historical.RData Projected species probability of occupancy and abundance under ocean warming Predicted probability of occupancy (preds1) and abundance (preds) under a doubling of carbon dioxide using simulations from GFDL 2.6. projected.RData Funding provided by: National Science ...