The impacts of sea-level rise (SLR) are likely to be the greatest for ecosystems that exist at the land-sea interface, where small changes in sea-level could result in drastic changes in habitat availability. Rocky intertidal ecosystems possess a number of characteristics which make them highly vulnerable to changes in sea-level, yet our understanding of potential community-scale responses to future SLR scenarios is limited. Combining remote-sensing with in-situ large-area imaging, we quantified habitat extent and characterized the biological community at two rocky intertidal study locations in California, USA. We then used a model-based approach to estimate how a range of SLR scenarios would affect total habitat area, areal extent of dominant benthic space occupiers, and numerical abundance of invertebrates. Our results suggest that SLR will reduce total available rocky intertidal habitat area at our study locations, leading to an overall decrease in areal extent of dominant benthic space occupiers, and a reduction in invertebrate abundances. As large-scale environmental changes, such as SLR, accelerate in the next century, more extensive spatially explicit monitoring at ecologically relevant scales will be needed to visualize and quantify their impacts to biological systems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.9186 | DOI Listing |
Biology (Basel)
January 2025
Instituto de Ciencias Marinas y Limnológicas, Universidad Austral de Chile, Independencia 631, Valdivia 5090000, Chile.
Intersexuality is a reproductive phenomenon that occurs in some gonochoric species and refers to the simultaneous presence of both male and female gametes within the same individual. Although this phenomenon has been reported in various invertebrate species, many aspects remain poorly understood, especially in marine mussels. However, it has been suggested that the prevalence of parasites within populations could induce the occurrence of intersex animals.
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January 2025
Bodega Marine Laboratory, University of California Davis, Bodega Bay, California, USA.
A growing body of theoretical studies and laboratory experiments has focused attention on reciprocal feedbacks between ecological and evolutionary processes. However, uncertainty remains about whether such eco-evolutionary feedbacks have an important or negligible influence on natural communities. Thus, recent discussions call for field experiments that explore whether selection on phenotypic variation within populations leads to contemporaneous effects on community dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOecologia
January 2025
Department of Biological Sciences, California State Polytechnic University, Humboldt, 1 Harpst St., Arcata, CA, 95521, USA.
The effects of climate warming on the distribution of range-expanding species are well documented, but the interactive effects of climate warming and range-expanding species on recipient communities remain understudied. With climate warming, range-expanding species may threaten local biodiversity due to their relatively stronger competitive or predatory effects on potentially weakened, or less well-adapted recipient communities. Acanthinucella spirata is a predatory marine gastropod that has expanded its distribution north along the California coast since the Pleistocene via a poleward range shift, tracking climatic warming.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants (Basel)
December 2024
NBFC-National Biodiversity Future Center, 90133 Palermo, Italy.
This study investigates the diversity and distribution of intertidal () species across different protection zones within the "Capo Gallo-Isola delle Femmine" Marine Protected Area (MPA) in the central Mediterranean Sea. Five species ( and ) were observed on the intertidal rocky shores, with varied abundances across the MPA's protection zones. was the only species found in all zones, with a much higher cover percentage in the most protected area (zone A).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
January 2025
Department of Biology, University of Pisa, Via Derna 1, 56126 Pisa, Italy; CoNISMa, Piazzale Flaminio 9, 00196 Rome, Italy.
Theory predicts that spatial modular networks contain the propagation of local disturbances, but field experimental tests of this hypothesis are lacking. We combined a field experiment with a metacommunity model to assess the role of modularity in buffering the spatial spread of algal turfs in three replicated canopy-dominated macroalgal networks. Experimental networks included three modules where plots with intact canopy cover (nodes) were connected through canopy-thinned corridors.
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