Pecuchet Laurene, Blanchet Marie-Anne, Frainer André, Husson Bérengère, Jørgensen Lis L, Kortsch Susanne, Primicerio Raul
Norwegian College of Fishery Science, UiT The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway.
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA), Tromsø, Norway.
Glob Chang Biol. 2020 Sep;26(9):4894-4906. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15196. Epub 2020 Jun 24.
Species are redistributing globally in response to climate warming, impacting ecosystem functions and services. In the Barents Sea, poleward expansion of boreal species and a decreased abundance of Arctic species are causing a rapid borealization of the Arctic communities. This borealization might have profound consequences on the Arctic food web by creating novel feeding interactions between previously non co-occurring species. An early identification of new feeding links is crucial to predict their ecological impact. However, detection by traditional approaches, including stomach content and isotope analyses, although fundamental, cannot cope with the speed of change observed in the region, nor with the urgency of understanding the consequences of species redistribution for the marine ecosystem. In this study, we used an extensive food web (metaweb) with nearly 2,500 documented feeding links between 239 taxa coupled with a trait data set to predict novel feeding interactions and to quantify their potential impact on Arctic food web structure. We found that feeding interactions are largely determined by the body size of interacting species, although species foraging habitat and metabolic type are also important predictors. Further, we found that all boreal species will have at least one potential resource in the Arctic region should they redistribute therein. During 2014-2017, 11 boreal species were observed in the Arctic region of the Barents Sea. These incoming species, which are all generalists, change the structural properties of the Arctic food web by increasing connectance and decreasing modularity. In addition, these boreal species are predicted to initiate novel feeding interactions with the Arctic residents, which might amplify their impact on Arctic food web structure affecting ecosystem functioning and vulnerability. Under the ongoing species redistribution caused by environmental change, we propose merging a trait-based approach with ecological network analysis to efficiently predict the impacts of range-shifting species on food webs.
物种正在全球范围内重新分布以响应气候变暖,这影响着生态系统的功能和服务。在巴伦支海,北方物种向极地扩张以及北极物种数量减少正导致北极群落迅速向北方化。这种北方化可能通过在以前不共存的物种之间创造新的捕食相互作用,对北极食物网产生深远影响。尽早识别新的捕食联系对于预测其生态影响至关重要。然而,包括胃内容物和同位素分析在内的传统方法虽然是基础的,但无法应对该地区观察到的变化速度,也无法应对理解物种重新分布对海洋生态系统影响的紧迫性。在这项研究中,我们使用了一个广泛的食物网(元网络),其中有239个分类单元之间近2500个已记录的捕食联系,并结合了一个性状数据集来预测新的捕食相互作用,并量化它们对北极食物网结构的潜在影响。我们发现,捕食相互作用在很大程度上由相互作用物种的体型决定,尽管物种的觅食栖息地和代谢类型也是重要的预测因素。此外,我们发现所有北方物种如果在北极地区重新分布,将在北极地区至少有一个潜在资源。在2014 - 2017年期间,在巴伦支海的北极地区观察到11种北方物种。这些入侵物种都是广食性物种,它们通过增加连通性和降低模块性来改变北极食物网的结构属性。此外,预计这些北方物种将与北极本地物种建立新的捕食相互作用,这可能会扩大它们对北极食物网结构的影响,进而影响生态系统功能和脆弱性。在由环境变化导致的持续物种重新分布情况下,我们建议将基于性状的方法与生态网络分析相结合,以有效预测范围变化物种对食物网的影响。