4.8 Article

Disentangling tropicalization and deborealization in marine ecosystems under climate change

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 21, Pages 4817-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.08.034

Keywords

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Funding

  1. synthesis center CESAB of the French Foundation for Research on Biodiversity (FRB)
  2. Filiere France Peche (FFP)
  3. Electricite de France
  4. IFREMER (ECLIPSE project)
  5. Region Hauts-deFrance
  6. Foundation for Research on Biodiversity (ECLIPSE project) [2014-10824]
  7. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPBB/525590]
  8. Canada Research Chairs Program
  9. VKR Centre for Ocean Life
  10. VILLUM research grant [13159]
  11. European Union [862428, 869300]
  12. U.S. National Science Foundation [DEB-1616821]
  13. Ocean Frontier Institute

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As climate change progresses, species are moving towards the poles while subtropical and tropical species are entering temperate environments. The Community Temperature Index (CTI) has been widely used to track the mean thermal affinity of a community, showing an increase under global warming. However, this increase is not solely due to the rise in warm-affinity species, but also linked to the decrease in cold-affinity species. Tropicalization is more pronounced in warmer areas that have experienced greater warming, while deborealization is stronger in areas closer to human populations or with higher thermal diversity in the community.
As climate change accelerates, species are shifting poleward and subtropical and tropical species are colonizing temperate environments.(1-3) A popular approach for characterizing such responses is the community temperature index (CTI), which tracks the mean thermal affinity of a community. Studies in marine,(4) freshwater,(5) and terrestrial(6) ecosystems have documented increasing CTI under global warming. However, most studies have only linked increasing CTI to increases in warm-affinity species. Here, using long-term monitoring of marine fishes across the Northern Hemisphere, we decomposed CTI changes into four underlying processes-tropicalization (increasing warm-affinity), deborealization (decreasing cold-affinity), borealization (increasing cold-affinity), and detropicalization (decreasing warm-affinity)-for which we examined spatial variability and drivers. CTI closely tracked changes in sea surface temperature, increasing in 72% of locations. However, 31% of these increases were primarily due to decreases in cold-affinity species, i.e., deborealization. Thus, increases in warm-affinity species were prevalent, but not ubiquitous. Tropicalization was stronger in areas that were initially warmer, experienced greater warming, or were deeper, while deborealization was stronger in areas that were closer to human population centers or that had higher community thermal diversity. When CTI (and temperature) increased, species that decreased were more likely to be living closer to their upper thermal limits or to be commercially fished. Additionally, warm-affinity species that increased had smaller body sizes than those that decreased. Our results show that CTI changes arise from a variety of underlying community responses that are linked to environmental conditions, human impacts, community structure, and species characteristics.

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