4.8 Article

Temperature impacts on fish physiology and resource abundance lead to faster growth but smaller fish sizes and yields under warming

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 21, Pages 6239-6253

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16341

Keywords

body size; climate change; fisheries yield; food web; metabolic theory; multi species; size spectrum

Funding

  1. Swedish Research Council FORMAS [217-2013-1315]
  2. Swedish Research Council [2015-03752]
  3. European Regional Development Fund [01.2.2-LMT-K-718-2-0006]
  4. Research Council of Lithuania (LMTLT)
  5. Australian Research Council [DP170104240]
  6. Swedish Research Council [2015-03752] Funding Source: Swedish Research Council

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Understanding the combined effects of climate warming and exploitation on fish communities is crucial for predicting their future biomass production and size structure. This study investigates how warming affects a size-based food web through both physiological and bottom-up pathways. The results suggest that temperature effects on both fish physiology and resource dynamics need to be considered to understand the impact of global warming on fish size structure.
Resolving the combined effect of climate warming and exploitation in a food web context is key for predicting future biomass production, size-structure and potential yields of marine fishes. Previous studies based on mechanistic size-based food web models have found that bottom-up processes are important drivers of size-structure and fisheries yield in changing climates. However, we know less about the joint effects of 'bottom-up' and physiological effects of temperature; how do temperature effects propagate from individual-level physiology through food webs and alter the size-structure of exploited species in a community? Here, we assess how a species-resolved size-based food web is affected by warming through both these pathways and by exploitation. We parameterize a dynamic size spectrum food web model inspired by the offshore Baltic Sea food web, and investigate how individual growth rates, size-structure, and relative abundances of species and yields are affected by warming. The magnitude of warming is based on projections by the regional coupled model system RCA4-NEMO and the RCP 8.5 emission scenario, and we evaluate different scenarios of temperature dependence on fish physiology and resource productivity. When accounting for temperature-effects on physiology in addition to on basal productivity, projected size-at-age in 2050 increases on average for all fish species, mainly for young fish, compared to scenarios without warming. In contrast, size-at-age decreases when temperature affects resource dynamics only, and the decline is largest for young fish. Faster growth rates due to warming, however, do not always translate to larger yields, as lower resource carrying capacities with increasing temperature tend to result in decline in the abundance of larger fish and hence spawning stock biomass. These results suggest that to understand how global warming affects the size structure of fish communities, both direct metabolic effects and indirect effects of temperature via basal resources must be accounted for.

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