Marine Science Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara, California.
Department of Ecology, Evolution, & Marine Biology, University of California, Santa Barbara, California.
Glob Chang Biol. 2019 Sep;25(9):3179-3192. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14706. Epub 2019 Jun 12.
Globally, anthropogenic pressures are reducing the abundances of marine species and altering ecosystems through modification of trophic interactions. Yet, consumer declines also disrupt important bottom-up processes, like nutrient recycling, which are critical for ecosystem functioning. Consumer-mediated nutrient dynamics (CND) is now considered a major biogeochemical component of most ecosystems, but lacking long-term studies, it is difficult to predict how CND will respond to accelerating disturbances in the wake of global change. To aid such predictions, we coupled empirical ammonium excretion rates with an 18-year time series of the standing biomass of common benthic macroinvertebrates in southern California kelp forests. This time series of excretion rates encompassed an extended period of extreme ocean warming, disease outbreaks, and the abolishment of fishing at two of our study sites, allowing us to assess kelp forest CND across a wide range of environmental conditions. At their peak, reef invertebrates supplied an average of 18.3 ± 3.0 µmol NH m hr to kelp forests when sea stars were regionally abundant, but dropped to 3.5 ± 1.0 µmol NH m hr following their mass mortality due to disease during a prolonged period of extreme warming. However, a coincident increase in the abundance of the California spiny lobster, Palinurus interupptus (Randall, 1840), likely in response to both reduced fishing and a warmer ocean, compensated for much of the recycled ammonium lost to sea star mortality. Both lobsters and sea stars are widely recognized as key predators that can profoundly influence community structure in benthic marine systems. Our study is the first to demonstrate their importance in nutrient cycling, thus expanding their roles in the ecosystem. Climate change is increasing the frequency and severity of warming events, and rising human populations are intensifying fishing pressure in coastal ecosystems worldwide. Our study documents how these projected global changes can drive regime shifts in CND and fundamentally alter a critical ecosystem function.
在全球范围内,人为压力正在通过改变营养相互作用来减少海洋物种的数量,并改变生态系统。然而,消费者的减少也会破坏重要的自下而上的过程,如营养物质循环,这对生态系统功能至关重要。消费者介导的营养动态(CND)现在被认为是大多数生态系统的主要生物地球化学组成部分,但由于缺乏长期研究,很难预测 CND 将如何应对全球变化带来的加速干扰。为了帮助进行这种预测,我们将经验性的氨排泄率与加利福尼亚南部海带林常见底栖大型无脊椎动物的 18 年立木生物量时间序列相结合。这个排泄率时间序列涵盖了一个长时间的海洋极端变暖、疾病爆发以及我们两个研究地点捕鱼的废除,使我们能够在广泛的环境条件下评估海带林的 CND。在海星在该地区大量存在时,珊瑚礁无脊椎动物的峰值时平均向海带林提供 18.3±3.0µmol NH m hr,但是由于疾病导致海星大量死亡,在长时间的极端变暖期间,排泄率下降到 3.5±1.0µmol NH m hr。然而,加利福尼亚刺龙虾 Palinurus interupptus(Randall,1840)的丰度增加,可能是由于捕鱼减少和海洋变暖,补偿了因海星死亡而损失的大部分循环氨。龙虾和海星都被广泛认为是可以深刻影响底栖海洋系统群落结构的关键捕食者。我们的研究首次证明了它们在营养循环中的重要性,从而扩大了它们在生态系统中的作用。气候变化正在增加变暖事件的频率和严重程度,而人口的增长正在加剧全球沿海生态系统的捕鱼压力。我们的研究记录了这些预计的全球变化如何导致 CND 的制度转变,并从根本上改变了一个关键的生态系统功能。