ArchivedDNAreveals marineheatwave‐associatedshifts in fish assemblages

Author:

Gold Zachary12345ORCID,Kelly Ryan P.6ORCID,Shelton Andrew Olaf2,Thompson Andrew R.3,Goodwin Kelly D.37,Gallego Ramón2,Parsons Kim M.2,Thompson Luke R.78,Kacev Dovi9,Barber Paul H.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cooperative Institute for Climate, Ocean, & Ecosystem Studies University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

2. Northwest Fisheries Science Center, NMFS/NOAA Seattle Washington USA

3. Southwest Fisheries Science Center, NMFS/NOAA La Jolla California USA

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology UCLA Los Angeles California USA

5. NOAA Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory Seattle Washington USA

6. School of Marine and Environmental Affairs University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

7. Ocean Chemistry and Ecosystems Division Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory Miami Florida USA

8. Northern Gulf Institute Mississippi State University Mississippi State Mississippi USA

9. Scripps Institution of Oceanography UCSD La Jolla California USA

Abstract

AbstractMarine heatwaves can drive large‐scale shifts in marine ecosystems, but studying their impacts on whole species assemblages is difficult. Analysis combining microscopic observations with environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding of the ethanol preservative of an ichthyoplankton biorepository spanning a 23 years time series captures major and sometimes unexpected changes to fish assemblages in the California Current Large Marine Ecosystem during and after the 2014–2016 Pacific Marine Heatwave. Joint modeling efforts reveal patterns of tropicalization with increases in southern, mesopelagic species and associated declines in commercially important temperate fish species (e.g., North Pacific Hake [Merluccius productus] and Pacific Sardine [Sardinops sagax]). Data show shifts in fisheries assemblages (e.g., Northern Anchovy,Engraulis mordax) even after the return to average water temperatures, corroborating ecosystem impacts found through multiple traditional surveys of this study area. Our innovative approach of metabarcoding preservative eDNA coupled with quantitative modeling leverages the taxonomic breadth and resolution of DNA sequences combined with microscopy‐derived ichthyoplankton identification to yield higher‐resolution, species‐specific quantitative abundance estimates. This work opens the door to economically reconstruct the historical dynamics of assemblages from modern and archived samples worldwide.

Funder

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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