Quantifying global potential for coral evolutionary response to climate change

被引:0
|
作者
Cheryl A. Logan
John P. Dunne
James S. Ryan
Marissa L. Baskett
Simon D. Donner
机构
[1] California State University,Department of Marine Science
[2] Monterey Bay,Department of Environmental Science and Policy
[3] NOAA/OAR Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory,Department of Geography
[4] University of California Davis,undefined
[5] University of British Columbia,undefined
来源
Nature Climate Change | 2021年 / 11卷
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摘要
Incorporating species’ ability to adaptively respond to climate change is critical for robustly predicting persistence. One such example could be the adaptive role of algal symbionts in setting coral thermal tolerance under global warming and ocean acidification. Using a global ecological and evolutionary model of competing branching and mounding coral morphotypes, we show symbiont shuffling (towards taxa with increased heat tolerance) was more effective than symbiont evolution in delaying coral-cover declines, but stronger warming rates (high emissions scenarios) outpace the ability of these adaptive processes and limit coral persistence. Acidification has a small impact on reef degradation rates relative to warming. Global patterns in coral reef vulnerability to climate are sensitive to the interaction of warming rate and adaptive capacity and cannot be predicted by either factor alone. Overall, our results show how models of spatially resolved adaptive mechanisms can inform conservation decisions.
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页码:537 / 542
页数:5
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