4.7 Article

Unravelling seasonal trends in coastal marine heatwave metrics across global biogeographical realms

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-11908-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Canterbury
  2. National Institute of Water and Atmospheric research (NIWA)
  3. Brian Mason Trust
  4. New Zealand Ministry of Primary Industries
  5. Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment

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This study analyzed marine heatwaves (MHWs) in 12 major coastal biogeographical realms by considering both biogeographical regions and seasons. The results showed that most regions experienced a significant increase in MHWs, with the majority of change points occurring between 1998 and 2006. This suggests that future, more frequent, and stronger MHWs may have significant impacts on coastal ecosystems.
Marine heatwaves (MHWs) can cause dramatic changes to ecologically, culturally, and economically important coastal ecosystems. To date, MHW studies have focused on geographically isolated regions or broad-scale global oceanic analyses, without considering coastal biogeographical regions and seasons. However, to understand impacts from MHWs on diverse coastal communities, a combined biogeographical-seasonal approach is necessary, because (1) bioregions reflect community-wide temperature tolerances and (2) summer or winter heatwaves likely affect communities differently. We therefore carried out season-specific Theil-Sen robust linear regressions and Pettitt change point analyses from 1982 to 2021 on the number of events, number of MHW days, mean intensity, maximum intensity, and cumulative intensity of MHWs, for each of the world's 12 major coastal biogeographical realms. We found that 70% of 240 trend analyses increased significantly, 5% decreased and 25% were unaffected. There were clear differences between trends in metrics within biogeographical regions, and among seasons. For the significant increases, most change points occurred between 1998 and 2006. Regression slopes were generally positive across MHW metrics, seasons, and biogeographical realms as well as being highest after change point detection. Trends were highest for the Arctic, Northern Pacific, and Northern Atlantic realms in summer, and lowest for the Southern Ocean and several equatorial realms in other seasons. Our analysis highlights that future case studies should incorporate break point changes and seasonality in MHW analysis, to increase our understanding of how future, more frequent, and stronger MHWs will affect coastal ecosystems.

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