Living on the Edge of Two Changing Worlds: Forecasting the Responses of Rocky Intertidal Ecosystems to Climate Change
University of South Carolina · Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom · +1 more institution
Abstract
Long-term monitoring shows that the poleward range edges of intertidal biota have shifted by as much as 50 km per decade, faster than most recorded shifts of terrestrial species. Although most studies have concentrated on species-range edges, recent work emphasizes how modifying factors such as regional differences in the timing of low tide can overwhelm large-scale climatic gradients, leading to a mosaic of environmental stress. We discuss how changes in the mean and variability in climatic regimes, as modified by local and regional factors, can lead to complex patterns of species distribution rather than simple range shifts. We describe how ecological forecasting may be used to generate explicit hypotheses…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 21.09
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 158
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Intertidal zone
- Hindcast
- Biota
- Range (aeronautics)
- Ecology
- Climate change
- Ecosystem
- Environmental science