Seawater carbonate chemistry and trophic flows and the living biomass of detritivores, herbivores, and carnivores

Global warming and ocean acidification are forecast to exert significant impacts on marine ecosystems worldwide. However, most of these projections are based on ecological proxies or experiments on single species or simplified food webs. How energy fluxes are likely to change in marine food webs in response to future climates remains unclear, hampering forecasts of ecosystem functioning. Using a sophisticated mesocosm experiment, we model energy flows through a species-rich multilevel food web, with live habitats, natural abiotic variability, and the potential for intra- and intergenerational adaptation. We show experimentally that the combined stress of acidification and warming reduced energy flows from the first trophic level (primary producers and detritus) to the second (herbivores), and from the second to the third trophic level (carnivores). Warming in isolation also reduced the energy flow from herbivores to carnivores, the efficiency of energy transfer from primary producers and detritus to herbivores and detritivores, and the living biomass of detritivores, herbivores, and carnivores. Whilst warming and acidification jointly boosted primary producer biomass through an expansion of cyanobacteria, this biomass was converted to detritus rather than to biomass at higher trophic levels-i.e., production was constrained to the base of the food web. In contrast, ocean acidification affected the food web positively by enhancing trophic flow from detritus and primary producers to herbivores, and by increasing the biomass of carnivores. Our results show how future climate change can potentially weaken marine food webs through reduced energy flow to higher trophic levels and a shift towards a more detritus-based system, leading to food web simplification and altered producer–consumer dynamics, both of which have important implications for the structuring of benthic communities.

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Cite this as

Ullah, Hadayet, Nagelkerken, Ivan, Goldenberg, Silvan Urs, Fordham, Damien A, Loreau, Jean-Paul (2018). Dataset: Seawater carbonate chemistry and trophic flows and the living biomass of detritivores, herbivores, and carnivores. https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.890965

DOI retrieved: 2018

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 29, 2024
Last update December 1, 2024
License CC-BY-3.0
Source https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.890965
Author Ullah, Hadayet
Given Name Hadayet
Family Name Ullah
More Authors
Nagelkerken, Ivan
Goldenberg, Silvan Urs
Fordham, Damien A
Loreau, Jean-Paul
Source Creation 2018
Publication Year 2018
Resource Type text/tab-separated-values - filename: Ullah-etal_2017_Plos
Subject Areas
Name: Biosphere

Name: Chemistry

Related Identifiers
Title: Climate change could drive marine food web collapse through altered trophic flows and cyanobacterial proliferation
Identifier: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.2003446
Type: DOI
Relation: IsSupplementTo
Year: 2018
Source: PLoS Biology
Authors: Ullah Hadayet , Nagelkerken Ivan , Goldenberg Silvan Urs , Fordham Damien A , Loreau Jean-Paul .

Title: seacarb: seawater carbonate chemistry with R. R package version 3.1
Identifier: https://cran.r-project.org/package=seacarb
Type: DOI
Relation: References
Year: 2016
Authors: Gattuso Jean-Pierre , Epitalon Jean-Marie , Lavigne Héloïse , Orr James C , Gentili Bernard , Proye Aurélien , Soetaert Karline , Rae James .