Frontiers Science Center for Deep Ocean Multispheres and Earth System and Key Laboratory of Mariculture, Ministry of Education, Ocean University of China, Qingdao, China.
Laboratory for Marine Fisheries Science and Food Production Processes, Pilot National Laboratory for Marine Science and Technology (Qingdao), Qingdao, China.
Glob Chang Biol. 2021 Oct;27(20):5310-5328. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15815. Epub 2021 Aug 8.
Natural systems can undergo critical transitions, leading to substantial socioeconomic and ecological outcomes. "Ecological resilience" has been proposed to describe the capacity of natural systems to absorb external perturbation and reorganize while undergoing change so as to still retain essentially the same function, structure, identity, and feedbacks. However, the mere application of ecological resilience in theoretical research and the lack of quantitative approaches present considerable obstacles for predicting critical transitions and understanding their mechanisms. Large marine ecosystems (LMEs) in the Northwestern Pacific are characterized by great biodiversity and productivity, as well as remarkable warming in recent decades. However, no information is available on the critical transitions and ecological resilience of LMEs in response to warming. Therefore, we applied an integrated resilience assessment framework to fisheries catch data from seven LMEs covering a wide range of regions, from tropical to subarctic, in the Northwestern Pacific to identify critical transitions, assess ecological resilience, and reconstruct folded stability landscapes, with a specific focus on the effects of warming. The results provide evidence of the occurrence of critical transitions, with fold bifurcation and hysteresis in response to increasing sea surface temperatures (SSTs) in the seven LMEs. In addition, these LMEs show similarities and synchronies in structure variations and critical transitions forced by warming. Both dramatic increases in SST and small fluctuations at the corresponding thresholds may trigger critical transitions. Ecological resilience decreases when approaching the tipping points and is repainted as the LMEs shift to alternative stable states with different resilient dynamics. Folded stability landscapes indicate that the responses of LMEs to warming are discontinuous, which may be caused by the reorganization of LMEs as their sensitivity to warming changes. Our study clarifies the nonlinear responses of LMEs to anthropogenic warming and provides examples of quantifying ecological resilience in empirical systems at unprecedented spatial and temporal scales.
自然系统可能会经历关键转变,导致重大的社会经济和生态后果。“生态弹性”被提出用来描述自然系统吸收外部干扰并在发生变化时重新组织的能力,以便仍然保持基本相同的功能、结构、身份和反馈。然而,生态弹性仅在理论研究中的应用以及缺乏定量方法,为预测关键转变和理解其机制带来了相当大的障碍。西北太平洋的大型海洋生态系统(LMEs)具有丰富的生物多样性和生产力,以及近几十年来显著的变暖。然而,关于 LMEs 对变暖的关键转变和生态弹性,尚无信息。因此,我们应用了一个综合弹性评估框架,对西北太平洋七个涵盖从热带到亚北极广泛区域的 LMEs 的渔业捕捞数据进行了分析,以识别关键转变、评估生态弹性并重建折叠稳定景观,特别关注变暖的影响。结果提供了证据表明,在七个 LMEs 中,由于海面温度(SST)的升高,出现了关键转变,表现为折叠分叉和滞后。此外,这些 LMEs 表现出相似性和同步性,结构变化和由变暖引起的关键转变。SST 的急剧增加和相应阈值的小波动都可能引发关键转变。当接近临界点时,生态弹性会降低,并随着 LMEs 向具有不同弹性动态的替代稳定状态转变而被重新绘制。折叠稳定景观表明,LMEs 对变暖的响应是不连续的,这可能是由于 LMEs 的敏感性随变暖而变化导致的重新组织。我们的研究阐明了 LMEs 对人为变暖的非线性响应,并提供了在前所未有的时空尺度上量化经验系统中生态弹性的实例。