Climate change in the coastal ocean: shifts in pelagic productivity and regionally diverging dynamics of coastal ecosystems

Author:

Navarrete Sergio A.12ORCID,Barahona Mario13,Weidberg Nicolas145,Broitman Bernardo R.23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Estación Costera de Investigaciones Marinas, Las Cruces, Center for Applied Ecology and Sustainability (CAPES), and Millennium Nucleus for Ecology and Conservation of Temperate Mesophotic Reefs (NUTME), Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile

2. Millennium Institute for Coastal Socio-Ecology (SECOS), Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile

3. Departamento de Ciencias, Facultad de Artes Liberales, Nucleo Milenio UPWELL, Facultad de Ingeniería y Ciencias, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez, Viña del Mar, Chile

4. Department of Biological Sciences, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC, USA

5. Facultad de Ciencias del Mar, Universidad de Vigo, Vigo, Galicia, Spain

Abstract

Climate change has led to intensification and poleward migration of the Southeastern Pacific Anticyclone, forcing diverging regions of increasing, equatorward and decreasing, poleward coastal phytoplankton productivity along the Humboldt Upwelling Ecosystem, and a transition zone around 31° S. Using a 20-year dataset of barnacle larval recruitment and adult abundances, we show that striking increases in larval arrival have occurred since 1999 in the region of higher productivity, while slower but significantly negative trends dominate poleward of 30° S, where years of recruitment failure are now common. Rapid increases in benthic adults result from fast recruitment–stock feedbacks following increased recruitment. Slower population declines in the decreased productivity region may result from aging but still reproducing adults that provide temporary insurance against population collapses. Thus, in this region of the ocean where surface waters have been cooling down, climate change is transforming coastal pelagic and benthic ecosystems through altering primary productivity, which seems to propagate up the food web at rates modulated by stock–recruitment feedbacks and storage effects. Slower effects of downward productivity warn us that poleward stocks may be closer to collapse than current abundances may suggest.

Funder

ANID

NASA

Iniciativa Científica Milenio

Millennium Science Initiative Program

ANID PIA/BASAL

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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