Considering biotic interactions exacerbates the predicted impacts of climate change on coral‐dwelling species

Author:

Zhang Zhixin123,Ma Shaobo12,Bede‐Fazekas Ákos45,Mammola Stefano67,Qu Meng12,Zhou Jinxin8,Feng Ellias Yuming9,Qin Geng12,Lin Qiang12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. CAS Key Laboratory of Tropical Marine Bio‐resources and Ecology South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences Guangzhou PR China

2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing PR China

3. Global Ocean and Climate Research Center South China Sea Institute of Oceanology Guangzhou PR China

4. HUN‐REN Centre for Ecological Research Institute of Ecology and Botany Vácrátót Hungary

5. Faculty of Science, Department of Environmental and Landscape Geography ELTE Eötvös Loránd University Budapest Hungary

6. Molecular Ecology Group (MEG) Water Research Institute (IRSA), National Research Council of Italy (CNR) Verbania Pallanza Italy

7. LIBRe—Laboratory for Integrative Biodiversity Research, Finnish Museum of Natural History University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

8. Institute of Industrial Science The University of Tokyo Kashiwa Chiba Japan

9. College of Environmental Science and Engineering Ocean University of China Qingdao PR China

Abstract

AbstractAimClimate change is affecting the geographic distributions of many species and researchers are increasingly relying on species distribution models (SDMs) to forecast species' redistributions under climate change. Such modelling studies, however, often ignore biotic interactions that shape species' geographic ranges. This is especially problematic for coral reefs, which host a high diversity of species and interactions. We tested how biotic interactions affect the distribution patterns of obligate coral‐dwelling Trapezia crabs.LocationGlobal coastal ocean.Time Period2000–2014, 2040–2050, 2090–2100.Major Taxa StudiedCorals and coral‐dwelling Trapezia crabs.MethodsWe determined the symbiotic relationships between 22 crab species in the genus Trapezia and corals via field survey and extensive literature review. We first developed SDMs for coral and crab species using exclusively abiotic variables (abiotic‐only models for corals and crabs). Then we constructed a second set of models where we accounted for coral distributions into crab predictions by combining model predictions for the two taxa a posteriori (abiotic‐plus‐biotic models for crabs only).ResultsWe obtained 30 commonly accepted coral‐crab symbiotic relationships from nine Trapezia crab and six stony coral species. The abiotic‐only model predictions showed that six corals may lose approximately one‐sixth of suitable ranges under RCP 8.5 in 2040–2050. The two types of models for crabs yielded largely different habitat suitability predictions and accounting for biotic interactions into SDM predictions exacerbates the predicted impacts of climate change on coral‐dwelling crabs.Main ConclusionsOur results show large discrepancies in crab spatial distribution patterns with and without accounting for symbiotic interactions. Our findings highlight the important role of modeller's decision on accounting for biotic interactions when predicting the geographical ranges of coral‐dwelling species, with important implications for designing future conservation and management strategies for marine species.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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