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Journal article

Distinct inter- and intra-specific vulnerability of coastal species to global change

From

Stellenbosch University1

National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark2

Section for Marine Living Resources, National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark3

University of Leeds4

Characterising and predicting species responses to anthropogenic global change is one of the key challenges in contemporary ecology and conservation. The sensitivity of marine species to climate change is increasingly being described with forecasted species distributions, yet these rarely account for population level processes such as genomic variation and local adaptation.

This study compares inter- and intra-specific patterns of biological composition to determine how vulnerability to climate change, and its environmental drivers, vary across species and populations. We compare species trajectories for three ecologically important southern African marine invertebrates at two time points in the future, both at the species level, with correlative species distribution models, and at the population level, with gradient forest models.

Reported range shifts are species-specific and include both predicted range gains and losses. Forecasted species responses to climate change are strongly influenced by changes in a suite of environmental variables, from sea surface salinity and sea surface temperature, to minimum air temperature. Our results further suggest a mismatch between future habitat suitability (where species can remain in their ecological niche) and genomic vulnerability (where populations retain their genomic composition), highlighting the inter- and intraspecific variability in species' sensitivity to global change.

Overall, this study demonstrates the importance of considering species and population level climatic vulnerability when proactively managing coastal marine ecosystems in the Anthropocene.

Language: English
Year: 2021
Pages: 3415-3431
ISSN: 13652486 and 13541013
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15651
ORCIDs: 0000-0002-5439-571X and Henriques, Romina

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