Authors
Thomas Wernberg, Mads S Thomsen, Fernando Tuya, Gary A Kendrick, Peter A Staehr, Benjamin D Toohey
Publication date
2010/6
Journal
Ecology letters
Volume
13
Issue
6
Pages
685-694
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
Ecology Letters (2010) 13: 685–694
Abstract
Successful mitigation of negative effects of global warming will depend on understanding the link between physiological and ecological responses of key species. We show that while metabolic adjustment may assist Australasian kelp beds to persist and maintain abundance in warmer waters, it also reduces the physiological responsiveness of kelps to perturbation, and suppresses canopy recovery from disturbances by reducing the ecological performance of kelp recruits. This provides a warning not to rely solely on inventories of distribution and abundance to evaluate ecosystem function. The erosion of resilience is mediated by a shift in adult‐juvenile interactions from competitive under cool to facilitative under warm conditions, supporting the prediction that positive interactions may become increasingly important in a warmer future. Kelp beds may remain intact but …
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