Modelling species invasions using thermal and trophic niche dynamics under climate change

Changing marine temperatures modify the distributional ranges of natural populations, but the success of invasion of new areas depends on local physical and ecological conditions. We explore the invasion by thermophilic species and their ecosystem effects by simulating a sea surface temperature incr...

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Main Authors: Simone eLibralato, Alberto eCaccin, Fabio ePranovi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmars.2015.00029/full
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spelling doaj-9745af886ff84270b828d267a29efe322020-11-24T22:55:54ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452015-05-01210.3389/fmars.2015.00029145293Modelling species invasions using thermal and trophic niche dynamics under climate changeSimone eLibralato0Alberto eCaccin1Fabio ePranovi2OGS (Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale)University of VeniceUniversity of VeniceChanging marine temperatures modify the distributional ranges of natural populations, but the success of invasion of new areas depends on local physical and ecological conditions. We explore the invasion by thermophilic species and their ecosystem effects by simulating a sea surface temperature increase using a trophodynamic model for the northern Adriatic Sea (NAS), in which thermal and trophic niches are explicitly represented for each thermophilic non-indigenous species and native species. The NAS acts as a cul-de-sac for local species, preventing a further poleward migration as a response to temperature rise. In this situation, model results showed that effects of warming and invasion produced complex, non-linear changes on biomasses but never resulted in a complete overturn of a group of native species and/or a bloom of invasive ones. Despite this, the diversity index stabilizes at increased values after simulating invasion, possibly indicating that in such enclosed systems the establishment of invasive species could represent enrichment in ecosystem structure. In addition, the absence of complete species substitution clearly showed the contribution of resident species towards increasing the resilience, i.e. the capability of the system to cope with invasion without changing substantially. Contrasting scenarios highlighted that changes in ecosystem primary production and species adaptation had secondary effects in ecosystem structure, while results for scenarios with different exploitation levels indicated that fishing can destabilize community structure in these change contexts, e.g. reducing community resilience. The results confirmed the importance of an ecological niche approach to analyze possible effects of invasion and highlighted the complexity of dynamics linked to temperature-driven species invasion’, in terms of both the predicted strength of impacts and the direction of biomass change.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmars.2015.00029/fullMediterranean Seacommunity structurefood webnon-indigenous speciesfishing impactsecological niche
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Simone eLibralato
Alberto eCaccin
Fabio ePranovi
spellingShingle Simone eLibralato
Alberto eCaccin
Fabio ePranovi
Modelling species invasions using thermal and trophic niche dynamics under climate change
Frontiers in Marine Science
Mediterranean Sea
community structure
food web
non-indigenous species
fishing impacts
ecological niche
author_facet Simone eLibralato
Alberto eCaccin
Fabio ePranovi
author_sort Simone eLibralato
title Modelling species invasions using thermal and trophic niche dynamics under climate change
title_short Modelling species invasions using thermal and trophic niche dynamics under climate change
title_full Modelling species invasions using thermal and trophic niche dynamics under climate change
title_fullStr Modelling species invasions using thermal and trophic niche dynamics under climate change
title_full_unstemmed Modelling species invasions using thermal and trophic niche dynamics under climate change
title_sort modelling species invasions using thermal and trophic niche dynamics under climate change
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Marine Science
issn 2296-7745
publishDate 2015-05-01
description Changing marine temperatures modify the distributional ranges of natural populations, but the success of invasion of new areas depends on local physical and ecological conditions. We explore the invasion by thermophilic species and their ecosystem effects by simulating a sea surface temperature increase using a trophodynamic model for the northern Adriatic Sea (NAS), in which thermal and trophic niches are explicitly represented for each thermophilic non-indigenous species and native species. The NAS acts as a cul-de-sac for local species, preventing a further poleward migration as a response to temperature rise. In this situation, model results showed that effects of warming and invasion produced complex, non-linear changes on biomasses but never resulted in a complete overturn of a group of native species and/or a bloom of invasive ones. Despite this, the diversity index stabilizes at increased values after simulating invasion, possibly indicating that in such enclosed systems the establishment of invasive species could represent enrichment in ecosystem structure. In addition, the absence of complete species substitution clearly showed the contribution of resident species towards increasing the resilience, i.e. the capability of the system to cope with invasion without changing substantially. Contrasting scenarios highlighted that changes in ecosystem primary production and species adaptation had secondary effects in ecosystem structure, while results for scenarios with different exploitation levels indicated that fishing can destabilize community structure in these change contexts, e.g. reducing community resilience. The results confirmed the importance of an ecological niche approach to analyze possible effects of invasion and highlighted the complexity of dynamics linked to temperature-driven species invasion’, in terms of both the predicted strength of impacts and the direction of biomass change.
topic Mediterranean Sea
community structure
food web
non-indigenous species
fishing impacts
ecological niche
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmars.2015.00029/full
work_keys_str_mv AT simoneelibralato modellingspeciesinvasionsusingthermalandtrophicnichedynamicsunderclimatechange
AT albertoecaccin modellingspeciesinvasionsusingthermalandtrophicnichedynamicsunderclimatechange
AT fabioepranovi modellingspeciesinvasionsusingthermalandtrophicnichedynamicsunderclimatechange
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