Munday Philip L
ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies, James Cook University, Townsville, Queensland 4811, Australia
Biol Lett. 2017 Sep;13(9). doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2017.0438.
Ocean acidification, caused by the uptake of additional carbon dioxide (CO) from the atmosphere, will have far-reaching impacts on marine ecosystems (Gattuso & Hansson 2011 Oxford University Press). The predicted changes in ocean chemistry will affect whole biological communities and will occur within the context of global warming and other anthropogenic stressors; yet much of the biological research conducted to date has tested the short-term responses of single species to ocean acidification conditions alone. While an important starting point, these studies may have limited predictive power because they do not account for possible interactive effects of multiple climate change drivers or for ecological interactions with other species. Furthermore, few studies have considered variation in responses among populations or the evolutionary potential within populations. Therefore, our knowledge about the potential for marine organisms to adapt to ocean acidification is extremely limited. In 2015, two of the pioneers in the field, Ulf Riebesell and Jean-Pierre Gattuso, noted that to move forward as a field of study, future research needed to address critical knowledge gaps in three major areas: (i) multiple environmental drivers, (ii) ecological interactions and (iii) acclimation and adaptation (Riebesell and Gattuso 2015 , 12-14 (doi:10.1038/nclimate2456)). In May 2016, more than 350 researchers, students and stakeholders met at the 4th International Symposium on the Ocean in a High-CO World in Hobart, Tasmania, to discuss the latest advances in understanding ocean acidification and its biological consequences. Many of the papers presented at the symposium reflected this shift in focus from short-term, single species and single stressor experiments towards multi-stressor and multispecies experiments that address knowledge gaps about the ecological impacts of ocean acidification on marine communities. The nine papers in this Special Feature are from authors who attended the symposium and address cutting-edge questions and emerging topics in ocean acidification research, across the taxonomic spectrum from plankton to top predators. They cover the three streams of research identified as crucial to understanding the biological impacts of ocean acidification: (i) the relationship with other environmental drivers, (ii) the effects on ecological process and species interactions, and (iii) the role that individual variation, phenotypic plasticity and adaptation will have in shaping the impacts of ocean acidification and warming on marine ecosystems.
海洋酸化是由大气中额外二氧化碳(CO₂)的吸收所导致的,它将对海洋生态系统产生深远影响(加图索和汉森,2011年,牛津大学出版社)。预计海洋化学性质的变化将影响整个生物群落,并且会在全球变暖和其他人为压力源的背景下发生;然而,迄今为止进行的许多生物学研究仅测试了单一物种对海洋酸化条件的短期反应。虽然这是一个重要的起点,但这些研究的预测能力可能有限,因为它们没有考虑多种气候变化驱动因素的可能交互作用,也没有考虑与其他物种的生态相互作用。此外,很少有研究考虑种群间反应的差异或种群内的进化潜力。因此,我们对海洋生物适应海洋酸化潜力的了解极其有限。2015年,该领域的两位先驱乌尔夫·里贝塞尔和让 - 皮埃尔·加图索指出,作为一个研究领域要取得进展,未来的研究需要填补三个主要领域的关键知识空白:(i)多种环境驱动因素,(ii)生态相互作用,以及(iii)驯化和适应(里贝塞尔和加图索,2015年,第12 - 14页(doi:10.1038/nclimate2456))。2016年5月,350多名研究人员、学生和利益相关者在塔斯马尼亚州霍巴特举行的第四届高CO₂世界中的海洋国际研讨会上齐聚一堂,讨论在理解海洋酸化及其生物学后果方面的最新进展。研讨会上发表的许多论文都反映了这种重点的转变,即从短期、单一物种和单一压力源实验转向多压力源和多物种实验,以填补关于海洋酸化对海洋群落生态影响的知识空白。本专题中的九篇论文来自参加研讨会的作者,探讨了海洋酸化研究中的前沿问题和新兴话题,涵盖了从浮游生物到顶级捕食者的整个分类谱系。它们涵盖了被认为对理解海洋酸化的生物学影响至关重要的三个研究方向:(i)与其他环境驱动因素的关系,(ii)对生态过程和物种相互作用的影响,以及(iii)个体变异、表型可塑性和适应在塑造海洋酸化和变暖对海洋生态系统影响方面所起的作用。