Marine clade sensitivities to climate change conform across timescales

Rapid climate change is postulated to cause marine extinctions, especially among climate-sensitive clades, traits and regions 1 – 6 . This premise is based on two hypotheses: (1) known individual physiological sensitivities scale up to macroecological selectivity patterns 4 , 7 , 8 and (2) ancient h...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inNature climate change Vol. 10; no. 3; pp. 249 - 253
Main Authors Reddin, Carl J., Nätscher, Paulina S., Kocsis, Ádám T., Pörtner, Hans-Otto, Kiessling, Wolfgang
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 01.03.2020
Nature Publishing Group
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Rapid climate change is postulated to cause marine extinctions, especially among climate-sensitive clades, traits and regions 1 – 6 . This premise is based on two hypotheses: (1) known individual physiological sensitivities scale up to macroecological selectivity patterns 4 , 7 , 8 and (2) ancient hyperthermal events are appropriate models to anticipate ecological winners and losers of anthropogenic climate change 9 . Yet these hypotheses have largely escaped quantitative appraisal. Here we show that experimental responses of modern marine ectotherms to single and combined climate-related stressors (such as seawater warming, hypoxia and acidification) align with Phanerozoic fossil extinction regimes across clades and functional traits. Of climate-related stressors, the synergistic interaction between warming and hypoxia 10 , encumbering aerobic metabolism, has the greatest potency as a proximate driver of extinction. All else being equal 8 , this synergy particularly imperils modern warm-water organisms. Modern–fossil agreement is strongest at intermediate–high extinction intensities and hyperthermal events but may fail at extreme extinction events, perhaps due to rising prominences of, and interactions among, additional biotic and abiotic stressors. According to results from marine ectotherms, clade-based sensitivity of individuals to climate-related stressors scales up from subannual experiments and decadal range-shift response magnitudes 11 , to extinction selectivity patterns at ancient climate-related stressor events and the Phanerozoic durations of genera. Climate change induced warming, hypoxia and acidification threaten marine species. Experimental work shows that the susceptibility of clades to climate-related stressors in the modern ocean is related to their extinction risk in the fossil record, which could allow prediction of future responses.
ISSN:1758-678X
1758-6798
DOI:10.1038/s41558-020-0690-7