Too hot to handle? An urgent need to understand climate change impacts on the biogeochemistry of tropical coastal waters

Tropical regions contain ecologically and socio‐economically important habitats, and are home to about 3.8 billion people, many of which directly depend on tropical coastal waters for their well‐being. At the basis of these ecosystems are biogeochemical processes. Climate change is expected to have...

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Veröffentlicht in:Global change biology 2024-01, Vol.30 (1), p.e17074-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Carreira, Cátia, Joyce, Patrick W. S., Morán, Xosé Anxelu G., Carvalho, Susana, Falkenberg, Laura, Lønborg, Christian
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container_issue 1
container_start_page e17074
container_title Global change biology
container_volume 30
creator Carreira, Cátia
Joyce, Patrick W. S.
Morán, Xosé Anxelu G.
Carvalho, Susana
Falkenberg, Laura
Lønborg, Christian
description Tropical regions contain ecologically and socio‐economically important habitats, and are home to about 3.8 billion people, many of which directly depend on tropical coastal waters for their well‐being. At the basis of these ecosystems are biogeochemical processes. Climate change is expected to have a greater impact in the tropics compared to temperate regions because of the relatively stable environmental conditions found there. However, it was surprising to find only 660 research articles published focusing on the impact of climate change on the biogeochemistry of coastal tropical waters compared to 4823 for temperate waters. In this perspective, we highlight important topics in need of further research. Specifically, we suggest that in tropical regions compared to temperate counterparts climate change stressors will be experienced differently, that organisms have a lower acclimation capacity, and that long‐term baseline biogeochemical datasets useful for quantifying future changes are lacking. The low number of research papers on the impacts of climate change in coastal tropical regions is likely due to a mix of reasons including limited resources for research and limited number of long time series in many developing tropical countries. Finally, we propose some action points that we hope will stimulate more studies in tropical coastal waters. Tropical coastal waters are home to 3.8 billion people, but what do we know about the biogeochemistry sustaining these ecosystems? In this perspective article, we argue that research should focus on these important, yet forgotten regions.
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete
subjects Acclimation
Acclimatization
Biogeochemistry
Climate change
Coastal ecology
Coastal waters
datasets
Economic importance
Environmental conditions
Environmental impact
impact
knowledge gap
stressors
tropic
Tropical environment
Tropical environments
title Too hot to handle? An urgent need to understand climate change impacts on the biogeochemistry of tropical coastal waters
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