When resilience is not enough: 2022 extreme marine heatwave threatens climatic refugia for a habitat-forming Mediterranean octocoral
Climate change is impacting ecosystems worldwide, and the Mediterranean Sea is no exception. Extreme climatic events, such as marine heat waves (MHWs), are increasing in frequency, extent, and intensity during the last decades, which has been associated with an increase in mass mortality events for...
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Zusammenfassung: | Climate change is impacting ecosystems worldwide, and the Mediterranean
Sea is no exception. Extreme climatic events, such as marine heat waves
(MHWs), are increasing in frequency, extent, and intensity during the last
decades, which has been associated with an increase in mass mortality
events for multiple species. Coralligenous assemblages, where the
octocoral Paramuricea clavata lives, are strongly affected by MHWs. The
Medes Islands Marine Reserve (NW Mediterranean) was considered a climate
refugia for P. clavata, as their populations were showing some resilience
to these changing conditions. In this study, we assessed the impacts of
the MHWs that occurred between 2016 and 2022 in seven shallow populations
of the octocoral P. clavata from a Mediterranean Marine Protected
Area. The years that the mortality rates increased significantly were
associated with the ones with strong MHWs, 2022 being the one with higher
mortalities. In 2022, with 50 MHW days, the proportion of total affected
colonies was almost 70%, with a proportion of the injured surface of
almost 40%, reaching levels never attained in our study site since the
monitoring was started. We also found spatial variability between the
monitored populations. Whereas few of them showed low levels of mortality,
others lost around 75% of their biomass. The significant impacts
documented here raise concerns about the future of shallow P. clavata
populations across the Mediterranean, suggesting that the resilience of
this species may not be maintained to sustain these populations face the
ongoing warming trends. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.tmpg4f569 |