Logo image
Combined mechanistic modelling predicts changes in species distribution and increased co‐occurrence of a tropical urchin herbivore and a habitat‐forming temperate kelp
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Combined mechanistic modelling predicts changes in species distribution and increased co‐occurrence of a tropical urchin herbivore and a habitat‐forming temperate kelp

Louise C Castro, Paulina Cetina‐Heredia, Moninya Roughan, Symon Dworjanyn, Loic Thibaut, Matthew A Chamberlain, Ming Feng and Adriana Vergés
Diversity and Distributions, Vol.26(9), pp.1211-1226
09/2020
pdf
Combined mechanistic modelling predicts changes in species distribution and increased co‐occurrence of a tropical urchin herbivore and a habitat‐forming temperate kelp1.24 MBDownloadView
Published (Version of record)CC BY V4.0 Open Access
url
Combined mechanistic modelling predicts changes in species distribution and increased co‐occurrence of a tropical urchin herbivore and a habitat‐forming temperate kelpView
Published (Version of record)CC BY V4.0 Open

Related links

Metrics

8 File views/ downloads
24 Record Views

UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#13 Climate Action
#14 Life Below Water
#15 Life on Land

Source: InCites

Abstract

Ecklonia radiata tropicalization herbivory Tripneustes gratilla dispersal species distribution model kelp mechanistic model Lagrangian particle‐tracking species range shifts climate change
Aim: Identify climate change impacts on spawning and settlement of a tropical herbivore (Tripneustes), optimal habitat of a temperate kelp (Ecklonia) and implications for these species regions of interaction under future climate. Location: Along eastern Australia and into the Tasman Sea including Lord Howe Island (LHI). Time period: A contemporary scenario (2006–2015) and future “business as usual” RCP 8.5 climate change scenario (2090–2100). Major taxa studied: The tropical sea urchin, Tripneustes gratilla, and the temperate kelp, Ecklonia radiata. Methods: We combined mechanistic models to create a predictive map of Ecklonia and Tripneustes distributions, and their future potential to co‐occur. We use 3D velocity and temperature fields produced with a state‐of‐the‐art configuration of the Ocean Forecasting Model version 3 that simulates the contemporary oceanic environment and projects it under an RCP 8.5 climate change scenario. We map the contemporary and future Ecklonia's realized and fundamental thermal niche; and simulate Tripneustes larval dispersal under both climate scenarios. Results: Based on the thermal affinity of kelp and increases in projected temperatures, we predict a poleward range contraction of ~530 km by 2100 for kelp on Australia's east coast. Climate‐driven changes in dispersal of Tripneustes lead to its range expansion into Bass Strait and poleward, ~340–650 km further into Ecklonia's habitat range inducing new areas of co‐occurrence in the future. We find warming decreases spawning and settlement of Tripneustes in the tropics by 43%, and causes significant connectivity changes for LHI with future reliance on self‐recruitment. Major conclusions: We predict novel regions of co‐occurrence between a temperate Ecklonia and tropical Tripneustes species which may lead to greater loss of kelp. Our results provide a new modelling approach for predicting species range shifts that is transferable to other marine ecosystems; it considers species response to abiotic change, predicts spatial spread and anticipates new regions for species interactions.

Details

Logo image