Affiliation:
1. Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies (IMAS) University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania Australia
2. Centre for Marine Socioecology University of Tasmania Hobart Tasmania Australia
3. Australian Antarctic Division Hobart Tasmania Australia
Abstract
AbstractAquatic ectotherms often attain smaller body sizes at higher temperatures. By analysing ~15,000 coastal‐reef fish surveys across a 15°C spatial sea surface temperature (SST) gradient, we found that the mean length of fish in communities decreased by ~5% for each 1°C temperature increase across space, or 50% decrease in mean length from 14 to 29°C mean annual SST. Community mean body size change was driven by differential temperature responses within trophic groups and temperature‐driven change in their relative abundance. Herbivores, invertivores and planktivores became smaller on average in warmer temperatures, but no trend was found in piscivores. Nearly 25% of the temperature‐related community mean size trend was attributable to trophic composition at the warmest sites, but at colder temperatures, this was <1% due to trophic groups being similarly sized. Our findings suggest that small changes in temperature are associated with large changes in fish community composition and body sizes, with important ecological implications.
Funder
University of Tasmania Foundation
Australian Research Council
Pew Charitable Trusts
Cited by
2 articles.
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