Merging trait‐based ecology and regime shift theory to anticipate community responses to warming

Author:

Weisberg Sarah J.1ORCID,Pershing Andrew J.2ORCID,Grigoratou Maria34ORCID,Mills Katherine E.4ORCID,Fenwick Ileana F.5,Frisk Michael G.1,McBride Richard6ORCID,Lucey Sean M.6ORCID,Kemberling Adam4ORCID,Beltz Brandon1,Nye Janet A.5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences Stony Brook University Stony Brook New York USA

2. Climate Central, Inc. Princeton New Jersey USA

3. Mercator Ocean International Toulouse France

4. Gulf of Maine Research Institute Portland Maine USA

5. Department of Earth, Marine and Environmental Sciences University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

6. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Northeast Fisheries Science Center Woods Hole Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractAnthropogenic warming is altering species abundance, distribution, physiology, and more. How changes observed at the species level alter emergent community properties is an active and urgent area of research. Trait‐based ecology and regime shift theory provide complementary ways to understand climate change impacts on communities, but these two bodies of work are only rarely integrated. Lack of integration handicaps our ability to understand community responses to warming, at a time when such understanding is critical. Therefore, we advocate for merging trait‐based ecology with regime shift theory. We propose a general set of principles to guide this merger and apply these principles to research on marine communities in the rapidly warming North Atlantic. In our example, combining trait distribution and regime shift analyses at the community level yields greater insight than either alone. Looking forward, we identify a clear need for expanding quantitative approaches to collecting and merging trait‐based and resilience metrics in order to advance our understanding of climate‐driven community change.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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