Widdrington Joseph B, Reis-Santos Patrick, Macdonald Jed I, Moore Bradley R, Nicol Simon J, Morrongiello John R, Gillanders Bronwyn M
Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories, School of Biological Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Oceanic Fisheries Programme, The Pacific Community, Noumea, South Province, New Caledonia.
Glob Chang Biol. 2025 Feb;31(2):e70051. doi: 10.1111/gcb.70051.
Climatic variation can play a critical role in driving synchronous and asynchronous patterns in the expression of life history characteristics across vast spatiotemporal scales. The synchronisation of traits, such as an individual's growth rate, under environmental stress may indicate a loss of phenotypic diversity and thus increased population vulnerability to stochastic deleterious events. In contrast, synchronous growth under favourable ecological conditions and asynchrony during unfavourable conditions may help population resilience and buffer against the negative implications of future environmental variability. Despite the significant implications of growth synchrony and asynchrony to population productivity and persistence, little is known about its causes and consequences either within or among fish populations. This is especially true for long-lived deep-sea species that inhabit environments characterised by large-scale interannual and decadal changes, which could propagate growth synchrony across vast distances. We developed otolith growth chronologies for three deep-sea fishes (Etelis spp.) over 65° of longitude and 20° of latitude across the Indo-Pacific region. Using reconstructed time series of interannual growth from six distinct Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs), we assessed the level of spatial synchrony at the individual-, population- and species-scale. Across five decades of data, complex patterns of synchronous and asynchronous growth were apparent for adult populations within and among EEZs of the Pacific Ocean, mediated by shifts in oceanographic phenomena such as the Pacific Decadal Oscillation. Overall, our results indicate that the degree of synchrony in biological traits at depth depends on life history stage, spatiotemporal scales of environmental variability and the influence of ecological factors such as competition and dispersal. By determining the magnitude and timing of spatially synchronous growth at depth and its links to environmental variability, we can better understand fluctuations in deep-sea productivity and its vulnerability to future environmental stressors, which are key considerations for sustainability.
气候变化在驱动跨越巨大时空尺度的生活史特征表达中的同步和异步模式方面可能发挥关键作用。在环境压力下,个体生长速率等性状的同步可能表明表型多样性的丧失,从而增加种群对随机有害事件的脆弱性。相比之下,在有利生态条件下的同步生长以及在不利条件下的异步生长可能有助于种群恢复力,并缓冲未来环境变化的负面影响。尽管生长同步和异步对种群生产力和持久性具有重大影响,但对于鱼类种群内部或种群之间其成因和后果却知之甚少。对于栖息在以大规模年际和年代际变化为特征的环境中的长寿深海物种而言尤其如此,这种变化可能会使生长同步在广阔距离上传播。我们针对印度 - 太平洋地区跨越65°经度和20°纬度的三种深海鱼类(长尾鳕属物种)建立了耳石生长年表。利用来自六个不同专属经济区(EEZ)的重建年际生长时间序列,我们评估了个体、种群和物种尺度上的空间同步水平。在长达五十年的数据中,太平洋各专属经济区内和各专属经济区之间的成年种群呈现出明显的同步和异步生长复杂模式,这些模式由诸如太平洋年代际振荡等海洋现象的变化介导。总体而言,我们的结果表明,深海生物性状的同步程度取决于生活史阶段、环境变化的时空尺度以及竞争和扩散等生态因素的影响。通过确定深海空间同步生长的幅度和时间及其与环境变化的联系,我们可以更好地理解深海生产力的波动及其对未来环境压力源的脆弱性,而这是可持续性的关键考量因素。