4.8 Article

Climate Change, Keystone Predation, and Biodiversity Loss

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SCIENCE
卷 334, 期 6059, 页码 1124-1127

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AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/science.1210199

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  1. National Science and Engineering Research Council (Canada)
  2. Padilla Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve

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Climate change can affect organisms both directly via physiological stress and indirectly via changing relationships among species. However, we do not fully understand how changing interspecific relationships contribute to community- and ecosystem-level responses to environmental forcing. I used experiments and spatial and temporal comparisons to demonstrate that warming substantially reduces predator-free space on rocky shores. The vertical extent of mussel beds decreased by 51% in 52 years, and reproductive populations of mussels disappeared at several sites. Prey species were able to occupy a hot, extralimital site if predation pressure was experimentally reduced, and local species richness more than doubled as a result. These results suggest that anthropogenic climate change can alter interspecific interactions and produce unexpected changes in species distributions, community structure, and diversity.

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