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Circumpolar dynamics of a marine top-predator track ocean warming rates.

Authors :
Descamps, Sébastien
Anker‐Nilssen, Tycho
Barrett, Robert T.
Irons, David B.
Merkel, Flemming
Robertson, Gregory J.
Yoccoz, Nigel G.
Mallory, Mark L.
Montevecchi, William A.
Boertmann, David
Artukhin, Yuri
Christensen‐Dalsgaard, Signe
Erikstad, Kjell‐Einar
Gilchrist, H. Grant
Labansen, Aili L.
Lorentsen, Svein‐Håkon
Mosbech, Anders
Olsen, Bergur
Petersen, Aevar
Rail, Jean‐Francois
Source :
Global Change Biology; Sep2017, Vol. 23 Issue 9, p3770-3780, 11p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Global warming is a nonlinear process, and temperature may increase in a stepwise manner. Periods of abrupt warming can trigger persistent changes in the state of ecosystems, also called regime shifts. The responses of organisms to abrupt warming and associated regime shifts can be unlike responses to periods of slow or moderate change. Understanding of nonlinearity in the biological responses to climate warming is needed to assess the consequences of ongoing climate change. Here, we demonstrate that the population dynamics of a long-lived, wide-ranging marine predator are associated with changes in the rate of ocean warming. Data from 556 colonies of black-legged kittiwakes Rissa tridactyla distributed throughout its breeding range revealed that an abrupt warming of sea-surface temperature in the 1990s coincided with steep kittiwake population decline. Periods of moderate warming in sea temperatures did not seem to affect kittiwake dynamics. The rapid warming observed in the 1990s may have driven large-scale, circumpolar marine ecosystem shifts that strongly affected kittiwakes through bottom-up effects. Our study sheds light on the nonlinear response of a circumpolar seabird to large-scale changes in oceanographic conditions and indicates that marine top predators may be more sensitive to the rate of ocean warming rather than to warming itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13541013
Volume :
23
Issue :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Global Change Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
124455333
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13715