Is our understanding of aquatic ecosystems sufficient to quantify ecologically driven climate feedbacks?

Author:

Selden Corday R.12ORCID,LaBrie Richard3ORCID,Ganley Laura C.4ORCID,Crocker Daniel R.5ORCID,Peleg Ohad6ORCID,Perry Danielle C.7ORCID,Reich Hannah G.8ORCID,Sasaki Matthew9ORCID,Thibodeau Patricia S.10ORCID,Isanta‐Navarro Jana11ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences Rutgers University New Brunswick New Jersey USA

2. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Rutgers University Piscataway New Jersey USA

3. Interdisciplinary Environmental Research Centre TU Bergakademie Freiberg Freiberg Germany

4. Anderson Cabot Center for Ocean Life, New England Aquarium Boston Massachusetts USA

5. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts USA

6. School of Biological Sciences Victoria University of Wellington Wellington New Zealand

7. Restoration Center, Office of Habitat Conservation National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Narragansett Rhode Island USA

8. Department of Biological Sciences, Biological Sciences University of New Hampshire Durham New Hampshire USA

9. Department of Marine Sciences University of Connecticut Mansfield Connecticut USA

10. School of Marine and Environmental Programs University of New England Biddeford Maine USA

11. Department of Biology University of Copenhagen Copenhagen Denmark

Abstract

AbstractThe Earth functions as an integrated system—its current habitability to complex life is an emergent property dependent on interactions among biological, chemical, and physical components. As global warming affects ecosystem structure and function, so too will the biosphere affect climate by altering atmospheric gas composition and planetary albedo. Constraining these ecosystem‐climate feedbacks is essential to accurately predict future change and develop mitigation strategies; however, the interplay among ecosystem processes complicates the assessment of their impact. Here, we explore the state‐of‐knowledge on how ecological and biological processes (e.g., competition, trophic interactions, metabolism, and adaptation) affect the directionality and magnitude of feedbacks between ecosystems and climate, using illustrative examples from the aquatic sphere. We argue that, despite ample evidence for the likely significance of many, our present understanding of the combinatorial effects of ecosystem dynamics precludes the robust quantification of most ecologically driven climate feedbacks. Constraining these effects must be prioritized within the ecological sciences for only by studying the biosphere as both subject and arbiter of global climate can we develop a sufficiently holistic view of the Earth system to accurately predict Earth's future and unravel its past.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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