Department of Coastal Systems, NIOZ Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, and Utrecht University, P.O. Box 59, 1790 AB Den Burg, Texel, the Netherlands.
Department of Environmental Science, Institute for Water and Wetland Research, Radboud University, Heyendaalseweg 135, 6525 AJ Nijmegen, the Netherlands; Aquatic Ecology and Environmental Biology Group, Institute for Water and Wetland Research, Radboud University, Heyendaalseweg 135, 6525 AJ Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Curr Biol. 2016 Apr 25;26(8):1051-6. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.02.023. Epub 2016 Mar 10.
In many marine ecosystems, biodiversity critically depends on foundation species such as corals and seagrasses that engage in mutualistic interactions [1-3]. Concerns grow that environmental disruption of marine mutualisms exacerbates ecosystem degradation, with breakdown of the obligate coral mutualism ("coral bleaching") being an iconic example [2, 4, 5]. However, as these mutualisms are mostly facultative rather than obligate, it remains unclear whether mutualism breakdown is a common risk in marine ecosystems, and thus a potential accelerator of ecosystem degradation. Here, we provide evidence that drought triggered landscape-scale seagrass degradation and show the consequent failure of a facultative mutualistic feedback between seagrass and sulfide-consuming lucinid bivalves that in turn appeared to exacerbate the observed collapse. Local climate and remote sensing analyses revealed seagrass collapse after a summer with intense low-tide drought stress. Potential analysis-a novel approach to detect feedback-mediated state shifts-revealed two attractors (healthy and degraded states) during the collapse, suggesting that the drought disrupted internal feedbacks to cause abrupt, patch-wise degradation. Field measurements comparing degraded patches that were healthy before the collapse with patches that remained healthy demonstrated that bivalves declined dramatically in degrading patches with associated high sediment sulfide concentrations, confirming the breakdown of the mutualistic seagrass-lucinid feedback. Our findings indicate that drought triggered mutualism breakdown, resulting in toxic sulfide concentrations that aggravated seagrass degradation. We conclude that external disturbances can cause sudden breakdown of facultative marine mutualistic feedbacks. As this may amplify ecosystem degradation, we suggest including mutualisms in marine conservation and restoration approaches.
在许多海洋生态系统中,生物多样性严重依赖于珊瑚和海草等基础物种,这些物种之间存在互利共生关系[1-3]。人们越来越担心海洋互利共生关系受到环境破坏会加剧生态系统退化,珊瑚共生关系的崩溃(“珊瑚白化”)就是一个典型的例子[2,4,5]。然而,由于这些共生关系大多是兼性的而不是必需的,因此仍然不清楚共生关系的崩溃是否是海洋生态系统中的常见风险,以及是否是生态系统退化的潜在加速因素。在这里,我们提供了干旱引发景观尺度海草退化的证据,并表明海草与消耗硫化物的贻贝之间的兼性互利共生反馈随后失败,这反过来似乎加剧了观察到的崩溃。局部气候和遥感分析显示,在一个低潮干旱胁迫强烈的夏季之后,海草发生了崩溃。潜在分析——一种检测反馈介导的状态转变的新方法——在崩溃过程中揭示了两个吸引子(健康和退化状态),这表明干旱破坏了内部反馈,导致突然的、块状退化。将崩溃前健康的退化斑块与仍然健康的斑块进行比较的实地测量表明,在退化斑块中,双壳类动物急剧减少,同时伴有高沉积物硫化物浓度,这证实了互利共生的海草-贻贝反馈的崩溃。我们的研究结果表明,干旱引发了互利共生关系的崩溃,导致有毒的硫化物浓度加剧了海草的退化。我们的结论是,外部干扰可能导致兼性海洋互利共生反馈的突然崩溃。由于这可能会放大生态系统的退化,我们建议在海洋保护和恢复方法中包括互利共生关系。