4.7 Article

Population collapse of habitat-forming species in the Mediterranean: a long-term study of gorgonian populations affected by recurrent marine heatwaves

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.2384

Keywords

Mediterranean sea; population collapse; temperate reefs; marine heatwaves; climate change; gorgonians

Funding

  1. Severo Ochoa Centre of Excellence [CEX2019-000928-S]
  2. MCIU/AEI/FEDER [RTI2018-095346-B-I00, 5216 | 5MED18_ 3.2_M23_007, 1MED15_3.2_M2_337]
  3. Foundation Prince Albert II Monaco [MIMOSA]
  4. TOTAL-Foundation [Perfect]
  5. European Union [689518, SEP-210597628]
  6. ICREA
  7. French National Research Agency-Make Our Planet Great Again [ANR-17-MPGA-0001]
  8. Medrecover group [2017 SGR 1521]
  9. [FPU15/05457]
  10. [UIDB/04423/2020]
  11. [UIDP/04423/2020]
  12. [IJCI-201731457]
  13. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-17-MPGA-0001] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In a Mediterranean marine protected area, habitat-forming octocoral populations impacted by a severe marine heatwave in 2003 have not recovered after 15 years, facing collapse trajectories that may have been hindered by recurrent marine heatwaves. This highlights the significant risk recurrent marine heatwaves pose for the long-term integrity and functioning of emblematic temperate reefs.
Understanding the resilience of temperate reefs to climate change requires exploring the recovery capacity of their habitat-forming species from recurrent marine heatwaves (MHWs). Here, we show that, in a Mediterranean highly enforced marine protected area established more than 40 years ago, habitat-forming octocoral populations that were first affected by a severe MHW in 2003 have not recovered after 15 years. Contrarily, they have followed collapse trajectories that have brought them to the brink of local ecological extinction. Since 2003, impacted populations of the red gorgonian Paramuricea clavata (Risso, 1826) and the red coral Corallium rubrum (Linnaeus, 1758) have followed different trends in terms of size structure, but a similar progressive reduction in density and biomass. Concurrently, recurrent MHWs were observed in the area during the 2003-2018 study period, which may have hindered populations recovery. The studied octocorals play a unique habitat-forming role in the coralligenous assemblages (i.e. reefs endemic to the Mediterranean Sea home to approximately 10% of its species). Therefore, our results underpin the great risk that recurrent MHWs pose for the long-term integrity and functioning of these emblematic temperate reefs.

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