AI Article Synopsis

  • Ecological communities can either remain stable over time or experience rapid changes, as seen in kelp forests affected by sea urchin overgrazing.
  • In 2014, a sea urchin outbreak along California's central coast led to a mix of healthy kelp forests and barren sea urchin-dominated areas.
  • A 14-year study revealed that while overall taxonomic diversity decreased, the decline in kelp varied by location, emphasizing that existing ecological conditions influenced the resilience of kelp forests amidst the disturbances.

Article Abstract

Ecological communities can be stable over multiple generations, or rapidly shift into structurally and functionally different configurations. In kelp forest ecosystems, overgrazing by sea urchins can abruptly shift forests into alternative states that are void of macroalgae and primarily dominated by actively grazing sea urchins. Beginning in 2014, a sea urchin outbreak along the central coast of California resulted in a patchy mosaic of remnant forests interspersed with sea urchin barrens. In this study, we used a 14-year subtidal monitoring dataset of invertebrates, algae, and fishes to explore changes in community structure associated with the loss of forests. We found that the spatial mosaic of barrens and forests resulted in a region-wide shift in community structure. However, the magnitude of kelp forest loss and taxonomic-level consequences were spatially heterogeneous. Taxonomic diversity declined across the region, but there were no declines in richness for any group, suggesting compositional redistribution. Baseline ecological and environmental conditions, and sea urchin behaviour, explained the persistence of forests through multiple stressors. These results indicate that spatial heterogeneity in preexisting ecological and environmental conditions can explain patterns of community change.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10846955PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2023.2749DOI Listing

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