Perilous
Times
Marine biodiversity loss due to warming and predation could
lead to more widespread extinction
by Staff Writers
Vancouver, Canada (SPX) Dec 09, 2011
University of British Columbia zoologist Christopher Harley says
the findings show that the combined effects of warming and
predation could lead to more widespread extinction than are
currently predicted, as animals or plants are unable to shift
their habitat ranges.
The biodiversity loss caused by climate change will result from a
combination of rising temperatures and predation - and may be more
severe than currently predicted, according to a study by
University of British Columbia zoologist Christopher Harley.
The study, published in the current issue of the journal Science,
examined the response of rocky shore barnacles and mussels to the
combined effects of warming and predation by sea stars.
Harley surveyed the upper and lower temperature limits of
barnacles and mussels from the cool west coast of Vancouver Island
to the warm shores of the San Juan Islands, where water
temperature rose from the relatively cool of the1950s to the much
warmer years of 2009 and 2010.
"Rocky intertidal communities are ideal test-beds for studying the
effects of climatic warming," says Christopher Harley, an
associate professor of zoology at UBC and author of the study.
"Many intertidal organisms, like mussels, already live very close
to their thermal tolerance limits, so the impacts can be easily
studied."
At cooler sites, mussels and rocky shore barnacles were able to
live high on the shore, well beyond the range of their predators.
However, as temperatures rose, barnacles and mussels were forced
to live at lower shore levels, placing them at the same level as
predatory sea stars.
Daily high temperatures during the summer months have increased by
almost 3.5 degrees Celsius in the last 60 years, causing the upper
limits of barnacle and mussels habitats to retreat by 50
centimeters down the shore. However, the effects of predators, and
therefore the position of the lower limit, have remained constant.
"That loss represents 51 per cent of the mussel bed. Some mussels
have even gone extinct locally at three of the sites I surveyed,"
says Harley.
Meanwhile, when pressure from sea star predation was reduced using
exclusion cages, the prey species were able to occupy hotter sites
where they don't normally occur, and species richness at the sites
more than doubled.
"A mussel bed is kind of like an apartment complex - it provides
critical habitat for a lot of little plants and animals," says
Harley. "The mussels make the habitat cooler and wetter, providing
an environment for crabs and other small crustaceans, snails,
worms and seaweed."
These findings provide a comprehensive look at the effects of
warming and predation, while many previous studies on how species
ranges will change due to warming assume that species will simply
shift to stay in their current temperature range.
Harley says the findings show that the combined effects of warming
and predation could lead to more widespread extinction than are
currently predicted, as animals or plants are unable to shift
their habitat ranges.
"Warming is not just having direct effects on individual species,"
says Harley. "This study shows that climate change can also alter
interactions between species, and produce unexpected changes in
where species can live, their community structure, and their
diversity."