Safeguarding nutrients from coral reefs under climate change

被引:0
|
作者
Camille Mellin
Christina C. Hicks
Damien A. Fordham
Christopher D. Golden
Marian Kjellevold
M. Aaron MacNeil
Eva Maire
Sangeeta Mangubhai
David Mouillot
Kirsty L. Nash
Johnstone O. Omukoto
James P. W. Robinson
Rick D. Stuart-Smith
Jessica Zamborain-Mason
Graham J. Edgar
Nicholas A. J. Graham
机构
[1] University of Adelaide,The Environment Institute and School of Biological Sciences
[2] Lancaster University,Lancaster Environment Centre
[3] Department of Nutrition,Ocean Frontier Institute, Department of Biology
[4] Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health,Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies
[5] Institute of Marine Research,Centre for Marine Socioecology
[6] Dalhousie University,ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
[7] Talanoa Consulting,College of Science and Engineering
[8] MARBEC,undefined
[9] University of Montpellier,undefined
[10] CNRS,undefined
[11] IFREMER,undefined
[12] IRD,undefined
[13] MARBEC,undefined
[14] University of Tasmania,undefined
[15] University of Tasmania,undefined
[16] Kenya Marine and Fisheries Research Institute,undefined
[17] James Cook University,undefined
[18] James Cook University,undefined
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摘要
The sustainability of coral reef fisheries is jeopardized by complex and interacting socio-ecological stressors that undermine their contribution to food and nutrition security. Climate change has emerged as one of the key stressors threatening coral reefs and their fish-associated services. How fish nutrient concentrations respond to warming oceans remains unclear but these responses are probably affected by both direct (metabolism and trophodynamics) and indirect (habitat and species range shifts) effects. Climate-driven coral habitat loss can cause changes in fish abundance and biomass, revealing potential winners and losers among major fisheries targets that can be predicted using ecological indicators and biological traits. A critical next step is to extend research focused on the quantity of available food (fish biomass) to also consider its nutritional quality, which is relevant to progress in the fields of food security and malnutrition. Biological traits are robust predictors of fish nutrient content and thus potentially indicate how climate-driven changes are expected to impact nutrient availability within future food webs on coral reefs. Here, we outline future research priorities and an anticipatory framework towards sustainable reef fisheries contributing to nutrition-sensitive food systems in a warming ocean.
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页码:1808 / 1817
页数:9
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