| Literature DB >> 28860642 |
Theresa A O'Meara1, Jenny R Hillman2, Simon F Thrush2.
Abstract
In coastal ecosystems, climate change affects multiple environmental factors, yet most predictive models are based on simple cause-and-effect relationships. Multiple stressor scenarios are difficult to predict because they can create a ripple effect through networked ecosystem functions. Estuarine ecosystem function relies on an interconnected network of physical and biological processes. Estuarine habitats play critical roles in service provision and represent global hotspots for organic matter processing, nutrient cycling and primary production. Within these systems, we predicted functional changes in the impacts of land-based stressors, mediated by changing light climate and sediment permeability. Our in-situ field experiment manipulated sea level, nutrient supply, and mud content. We used these stressors to determine how interacting environmental stressors influence ecosystem function and compared results with data collected along elevation gradients to substitute space for time. We show non-linear, multi-stressor effects deconstruct networks governing ecosystem function. Sea level rise altered nutrient processing and impacted broader estuarine services ameliorating nutrient and sediment pollution. Our experiment demonstrates how the relationships between nutrient processing and biological/physical controls degrade with environmental stress. Our results emphasise the importance of moving beyond simple physically-forced relationships to assess consequences of climate change in the context of ecosystem interactions and multiple stressors.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28860642 PMCID: PMC5578963 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-11058-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Benthic chlorophyll-α content from all sites. Letters indicate significant differences between controls and *indicate differences between control and SLR treatments (n = 36 per treatment, 288 total).
Figure 2Loss of model strength in response to environmental stress (light: slope = −0.14 R2 = 0.62; dark: slope = −0.11, R2 = 0.43). Our ability to predict ammonium flux (NH4 +) decreased with added stress, regardless of stressor combination.
Figure 3Conceptual network of interactions between nutrients, microphytobenthos and macrofauna inferred from the experiment (a) under normal conditions and (b) where environmental stress has deemphasised the role of seabed processing. The network and the stability of the system are strongly coupled to microphytobenthic production, which breaks down with stress.