Impacts of ocean warming on echinoderms: A meta‐analysis

Author:

Lang Bethan J.12ORCID,Donelson Jennifer M.1ORCID,Bairos‐Novak Kevin R.12ORCID,Wheeler Carolyn R.13ORCID,Caballes Ciemon F.14ORCID,Uthicke Sven5ORCID,Pratchett Morgan S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

2. AIMS@JCU James Cook University Townsville Queensland Australia

3. School for the Environment The University of Massachusetts Boston Boston Massachusetts USA

4. National Science Foundation EPSCoR—Guam Ecosystems Collaboratorium for Corals and Oceans University of Guam Marine Laboratory Mangilao Guam USA

5. Australian Institute of Marine Science Townsville Queensland Australia

Abstract

AbstractRising ocean temperatures are threatening marine species and populations worldwide, and ectothermic taxa are particularly vulnerable. Echinoderms are an ecologically important phylum of marine ectotherms and shifts in their population dynamics can have profound impacts on the marine environment. The effects of warming on echinoderms are highly variable across controlled laboratory‐based studies. Accordingly, synthesis of these studies will facilitate the better understanding of broad patterns in responses of echinoderms to ocean warming. Herein, a meta‐analysis incorporating the results of 85 studies (710 individual responses) is presented, exploring the effects of warming on various performance predictors. The mean responses of echinoderms to all magnitudes of warming were compared across multiple biological responses, ontogenetic life stages, taxonomic classes, and regions, facilitated by multivariate linear mixed effects models. Further models were conducted, which only incorporated responses to warming greater than the projected end‐of‐century mean annual temperatures at the collection sites. This meta‐analysis provides evidence that ocean warming will generally accelerate metabolic rate (+32%) and reduce survival (−35%) in echinoderms, and echinoderms from subtropical (−9%) and tropical (−8%) regions will be the most vulnerable. The relatively high vulnerability of echinoderm larvae to warming (−20%) indicates that this life stage may be a significant developmental bottleneck in the near‐future, likely reducing successful recruitment into populations. Furthermore, asteroids appear to be the class of echinoderms that are most negatively affected by elevated temperature (−30%). When considering only responses to magnitudes of warming representative of end‐of‐century climate change projections, the negative impacts on asteroids, tropical species and juveniles were exacerbated (−51%, −34% and −40% respectively). The results of these analyses enable better predictions of how keystone and invasive echinoderm species may perform in a warmer ocean, and the possible consequences for populations, communities and ecosystems.

Funder

Australian Research Council

James Cook University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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