Temperature-related biodiversity change across temperate marine and terrestrial systems

Laura H. Antão(University of Helsinki), Amanda E. Bates(Memorial University of Newfoundland), Shane A. Blowes(German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research), Conor Waldock(Natural History Museum), Sarah R. Supp(Denison University), Anne E. Magurran(University of St Andrews), María Dornelas(University of St Andrews), Aafke M. Schipper(Netherlands Environmental Assessment Agency)
Nature Ecology & Evolution
May 4, 2020
Cited by 285Open Access
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Abstract

Climate change is reshaping global biodiversity as species respond to changing temperatures. However, the net effects of climate-driven species redistribution on local assemblage diversity remain unknown. Here, we relate trends in species richness and abundance from 21,500 terrestrial and marine assemblage time series across temperate regions (23.5–60.0° latitude) to changes in air or sea surface temperature. We find a strong coupling between biodiversity and temperature changes in the marine realm, where species richness mostly increases with warming. However, biodiversity responses are conditional on the baseline climate, such that in initially warmer locations richness increase is more pronounced while abundance declines with warming. In contrast, we do not detect systematic temperature-related richness or abundance trends on land, despite a greater magnitude of warming. As the world is committed to further warming, substantial challenges remain in maintaining local biodiversity amongst the non-uniform inflow and outflow of ‘climate migrants’. Temperature-driven community restructuring is especially evident in the ocean, whereas climatic debt may be accumulating on land. Biodiversity time series from temperate regions reveal that marine communities in warmer places gain species but lose individuals with warming, but colder environments show weaker trends, whereas no systematic relationships between biodiversity and temperature change were detectable for terrestrial communities.


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