4.8 Article

Rapid restructuring of the odontocete community in an ocean warming hotspot

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 22, Pages 6524-6540

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16382

Keywords

cetacean; climate response; distributional shift; rapid warming; regional change; trailing edge

Funding

  1. Climate Program Office [NA17OAR4310109]
  2. New York State Environmental Protection Fund Ocean and Great Lakes Program

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This study used stranding data to examine the distribution and relative abundance changes of odontocetes in the Northeast and Southeast United States. The results showed that odontocetes are shifting poleward at a faster rate than predicted by climate velocity. The changes in odontocete community were more apparent in the Northeast than in the Southeast, highlighting the importance of regional warming. The findings suggest marked changes to the distribution of cetaceans under continued warming.
Cetaceans are important consumers in marine ecosystems, but few studies have quantified their climate responses. The rapid, directional warming occurring in the Northeast United States (NEUS) provides a unique opportunity to assess climate impacts on cetaceans. We used stranding data to examine changes to the distribution and relative abundance of odontocetes from 1996 to 2020 in both the NEUS and the Southeast United States (SEUS), which is not warming. We conducted simulations to determine the number of stranding events needed to detect a distributional shift for each species given the speed of the shift and the spatial variability in strandings. We compared observed shifts to climate velocity. Smaller sample sizes were needed to detect more rapid poleward shifts, particularly for species with low spatial variability. Poleward shifts were observed in all species with sufficient sample sizes, and shifts were faster than predicted by climate velocity. For species whose trailing edge of distribution occurred in the NEUS, the center of distribution approached the northern limit of the NEUS and relative abundance declined through time, suggesting shifts north out of US waters. The relative abundance of warm water species in the stranding record increased significantly in the NEUS while that of cool water species declined significantly as their distributions shifted north out of the NEUS. Changes in the odontocete community were less apparent in the SEUS, highlighting the importance of regional warming. Observed poleward shifts and changes in species composition suggest a reorganization of the odontocete community in the NEUS in response to rapid warming. We suggest that strandings provide a key dataset for understanding climate impacts on cetaceans given limitations of survey effort and modeling approaches for predicting distributions under rapidly changing conditions. Our findings portend marked changes to the distribution of highly mobile consumer species across international boundaries under continued warming.

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