Climate change and the threat of novel marine predators in Antarctica

ECOSPHERE(2017)

引用 20|浏览38
暂无评分
摘要
Historically low temperatures have severely limited skeleton-breaking predation on the Antarctic shelf, facilitating the evolution of a benthic fauna poorly defended against durophagy. Now, rapid warming of the Southern Ocean is restructuring Antarctic marine ecosystems as conditions become favorable for range expansions. Populations of the lithodid crab Paralomis birsteini currently inhabit some areas of the continental slope off Antarctica. They could potentially expand along the slope and upward to the outer continental shelf, where temperatures are no longer prohibitively low. We identified two sites inhabited by different densities of lithodids in the slope environment along the western Antarctic Peninsula. Analysis of the gut contents of P. birsteini trapped on the slope revealed them to be opportunistic invertivores. The abundances of three commonly eaten, eurybathic taxa-ophiuroids, echinoids, and gastropods-were negatively associated with P. birsteini off Marguerite Bay, where lithodid densities averaged 4280 ind/km(2) at depths of 1100-1499 m (range 3440-5010 ind/km(2)), but not off Anvers Island, where lithodid densities were lower, averaging 2060 ind/km(2) at these depths (range 660-3270 ind/km(2)). Higher abundances of lithodids appear to exert a negative effect on invertebrate distribution on the slope. Lateral or vertical range expansions of P. birsteini at sufficient densities could substantially reduce populations of their benthic prey off Antarctica, potentially exacerbating the direct impacts of rising temperatures on the distribution and diversity of the contemporary shelf benthos.
更多
查看译文
关键词
Antarctica,bathyal,benthic,climate change,Echinoidea,Lithodidae,Ophiuroidea,Paralomis,polar emergence,predation
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要