Responses of Coastal Ecosystems to Climate Change: Insights from Long-Term Ecological Research

Author:

Reed Daniel C1ORCID,Schmitt Russell J12,Burd Adrian B23,Burkepile Deron E1,Kominoski John S4ORCID,McGlathery Karen J5,Miller Robert J1,Morris James T6,Zinnert Julie C7

Affiliation:

1. Marine Science Institute , Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, United States

2. University of California , Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, California, United States

3. University of Georgia , Athens, Georgia, United States

4. Florida International University , Miami, Florida, United States

5. University of Virginia , Charlottesville, Virginia, United States

6. University of South Carolina , Columbia, South Carolina, United States

7. Virginia Commonwealth University , Richmond, Virginia, United States

Abstract

abstract Coastal ecosystems play a disproportionately large role in society, and climate change is altering their ecological structure and function, as well as their highly valued goods and services. In the present article, we review the results from decade-scale research on coastal ecosystems shaped by foundation species (e.g., coral reefs, kelp forests, coastal marshes, seagrass meadows, mangrove forests, barrier islands) to show how climate change is altering their ecological attributes and services. We demonstrate the value of site-based, long-term studies for quantifying the resilience of coastal systems to climate forcing, identifying thresholds that cause shifts in ecological state, and investigating the capacity of coastal ecosystems to adapt to climate change and the biological mechanisms that underlie it. We draw extensively from research conducted at coastal ecosystems studied by the US Long Term Ecological Research Network, where long-term, spatially extensive observational data are coupled with shorter-term mechanistic studies to understand the ecological consequences of climate change.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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