4.6 Article

Climatic controls on the global distribution, abundance, and species richness of mangrove forests

Journal

ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS
Volume 87, Issue 2, Pages 341-359

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecm.1248

Keywords

abundance; climate change; climate gradients; climatic drivers; climatic thresholds; distribution; ecological thresholds; mangrove forests; rainfall; range limit; species richness; temperature

Categories

Funding

  1. USGS Ecosystems Mission Area
  2. USGS Climate and Land Use Change RD Program
  3. Department of Interior South Central Climate Science Center
  4. Department of Interior Southeast Climate Science Center
  5. EPA Gulf of Mexico Program
  6. USGS Greater Everglades Priority Ecosystems Science Program
  7. USGS Wetland and Aquatic Research Center
  8. USGS Ecosystems and Climate and Land Use Change Programs

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Mangrove forests are highly productive tidal saline wetland ecosystems found along sheltered tropical and subtropical coasts. Ecologists have long assumed that climatic drivers (i.e., temperature and rainfall regimes) govern the global distribution, structure, and function of mangrove forests. However, data constraints have hindered the quantification of direct climate-mangrove linkages in many parts of the world. Recently, the quality and availability of global-scale climate and mangrove data have been improving. Here, we used these data to better understand the influence of air temperature and rainfall regimes upon the distribution, abundance, and species richness of mangrove forests. Although our analyses identify global-scale relationships and thresholds, we show that the influence of climatic drivers is best characterized via regional range-limit-specific analyses. We quantified climatic controls across targeted gradients in temperature and/or rainfall within 14 mangrove distributional range limits. Climatic thresholds for mangrove presence, abundance, and species richness differed among the 14 studied range limits. We identified minimum temperature-based thresholds for range limits in eastern North America, eastern Australia, New Zealand, eastern Asia, eastern South America, and southeast Africa. We identified rainfall-based thresholds for range limits in western North America, western Gulf of Mexico, western South America, western Australia, Middle East, northwest Africa, east central Africa, and west-central Africa. Our results show that in certain range limits (e.g., eastern North America, western Gulf of Mexico, eastern Asia), winter air temperature extremes play an especially important role. We conclude that rainfall and temperature regimes are both important in western North America, western Gulf of Mexico, and western Australia. With climate change, alterations in temperature and rainfall regimes will affect the global distribution, abundance, and diversity of mangrove forests. In general, warmer winter temperatures are expected to allow mangroves to expand poleward at the expense of salt marshes. However, dispersal and habitat availability constraints may hinder expansion near certain range limits. Along arid and semiarid coasts, decreases or increases in rainfall are expected to lead to mangrove contraction or expansion, respectively. Collectively, our analyses quantify climate-mangrove linkages and improve our understanding of the -expected global-and regional-scale effects of climate change upon mangrove forests.

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