Climate change is affecting a wide ensemble of Pacific Ocean sea life,
according to a new study.
Climate Change Disrupting Fish Habitats
Scripps research depicts warming's vast influence across marine life spectrum
While he was a graduate student at Scripps Institution of
Oceanography at UC San Diego, Chih-Hao Hsieh and Scripps professor
George Sugihara began asking questions about how climate change and
warming ocean waters might be influencing marine life.
They began answering some of those questions based on data from the
California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigations (CalCOFI), a
program based at Scripps that has monitored the marine environment
of the California Current for nearly 60 years. They started to see
patterns emerge as they evaluated the sensitivity of fish habitats
in response to climate-driven ocean warming.

The study progressed steadily, but it was taking time away from
Hsieh's core thesis work. The project needed to be delayed.
Flash forward a year. Hsieh, with a Scripps Oceanography doctoral
degree under his belt, was hired as a professor at the Institute of
Oceanography at National Taiwan University. Shortly thereafter,
Hsieh dug back into the data and with several colleagues completed
the analysis, which was recently published in the journal Global
Change Biology.
The resulting work, the first broad study of its kind, describes how
the effects of climate change are being felt across a wide ensemble
of sea life. The climate-induced changes span from migration pattern
alterations to key population shifts.
"This is the first evidence in the ocean that climate change can
have dramatic effects on large-scale fisheries ecosystems," said
Sugihara. "These are some very interesting consequences that people
haven't really thought about. These warming events could actually
cause a constellation of species that normally don't interact to
begin to interact and that could have potentially large effects on
what we think ought to be the natural ecosystem. This is akin to the
action of invasive species but on a very large scale."

Sugihara said large-scale studies on ecosystem responses to climate
change have been done in terrestrial systems, such as for birds and
plants. In addition, anecdotal studies have been suggested for a few
isolated marine species, such as Bearing sea pollock, for which
changes in distribution could be due to fishing pressure. Hsieh's
study, however, is the first to show the effect in the marine
environment using non-fishery-based data on a large scale and for a
large ensemble of species.
To arrive at their results, the scientists studied quantities of
larvae for 34 fish groups. Numbers and geographic locations of fish
larvae—a quantity known as "biomass"—are indicative of the
abundance of fish species. They compared that information with
physical measurements, including water temperature.
Among their findings, the researchers describe a boost in the
population of 25 fish groups as the water temperature shifted from
cold to warm temperatures over recent decades.
They also found that fish species that typically migrate vertically
in the marine water column shifted geographically northward to
colder waters, a change that wasn't seen in fish that don't migrate
as such in the water column. The authors speculate this is because
the upper layers of the water column warmed considerably more than
deeper levels, leaving the bottom dwellers less impacted. Migrating
species would have sensed the warming more readily and moved in
response.
The researchers also discovered that groups that typically reside in
the far open ocean shifted closer to shore as the temperature
increased and species that normally reside in coastal areas moved
even closer to shore.
"These sensitivities to climate can cause different fish species to
start interacting," said Sugihara. "It's almost like seeing ocean
invaders come into the coast and these ad hoc mixed ecosystems could
potentially have large ecological and commercial consequences down
the road. They could further destabilize fish stocks, making them
more variable and less predictable, adding risk to the already
risk-prone fishing industry."
A related study led by Hsieh that recently appeared in the Canadian
Journal of Fisheriesnd Aquatic Sciences showed that fished or
exploited species are more sensitive to environmental changes.
"Open-ocean fishes that were rarely studied due to their low
economic values may in fact provide important clues signifying how
marine organisms are responding to climate variations," said Hsieh.
"The interactions found between oceanic and shallow water coastal
species also imply that anthropogenic disturbances, for example
fishing, could have profound indirect effects on other components of
the marine ecosystem."
In addition to Hsieh and Sugihara, coauthors of the Global Change
Biology paper include Hey Jin Kim (Scripps Oceanography and Monterey
Bay Aquarium Research Institute), William Watson (Southwest
Fisheries Science Center), and Emanuele Di Lorenzo, aScripps
graduate now at Georgia Institute of Technology.
The study was funded by The National Science Foundation CAMEO
(Comparative Analysis of Marine Ecosystem Organization) program, the
National Marine Fisheries Service, National Science Council's
(Taiwan) Long-term Observation and Research of the East China Sea,
and National Taiwan Ocean University's Center for Marine Bioscience
and Biotechnology.
—Mario C. Aguilera
May 2009
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