Gårdmark, Anna
- Department of Aquatic Resources (SLU Aqua), Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2020Peer reviewedOpen access
Gårdmark, Anna; Huss, Magnus
Understanding food web responses to global warming, and their consequences for conservation and management, requires knowledge on how responses vary both among and within species. Warming can reduce both species richness and biomass production. However, warming responses observed at different levels of biological organization may seem contradictory. For example, higher temperatures commonly lead to faster individual body growth but can decrease biomass production of fishes. Here we show that the key to resolve this contradiction is intraspecific variation, because (i) community dynamics emerge from interactions among individuals, and (ii) ecological interactions, physiological processes and warming effects often vary over life history. By combining insights from temperature-dependent dynamic models of simple food webs, observations over large temperature gradients and findings from short-term mesocosm and multi-decadal whole-ecosystem warming experiments, we resolve mechanisms by which warming waters can affect food webs via individual-level responses and review their empirical support. We identify a need for warming experiments on food webs manipulating population size structures to test these mechanisms. We stress that within-species variation in both body size, temperature responses and ecological interactions are key for accurate predictions and appropriate conservation efforts for fish production and food web function under a warming climate.
body growth; population size structure; trait variation; predator–prey; fish production; climate change
Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences
2020, volume: 375, number: 1814, article number: 20190449
Coastal and sea areas
Lakes and watercourses
SDG13 Climate action
SDG14 Life below water
Fish and Aquacultural Science
Ecology
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/109061