Increased importance of cool-water fish at high latitudes emerges from individual-level responses to warming
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/29373Dato
2023-06-06Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Smalås, Aslak; Primicerio, Raul; Kahilainen, Kimmo K.; Terentjev, Petr; Kashulin, Nikolay; Zubova, Elena; Amundsen, Per-ArneSammendrag
High latitude ecosystems are experiencing the most rapid warming on earth, expected to trigger a diverse array of ecological responses. Climate warming affects the
ecophysiology of fish, and fish close to the cold end of their thermal distribution are
expected to increase somatic growth from increased temperatures and a prolonged
growth season, which in turn affects maturation schedules, reproduction, and survival, boosting population growth. Accordingly, fish species living in ecosystems close
to their northern range edge should increase in relative abundance and importance,
and possibly displace cold-water adapted species. We aim to document whether and
how population-level effects of warming are mediated by individual-level responses to
increased temperatures, shift community structure, and composition in high latitude
ecosystems. We studied 11 cool-water adapted perch populations in communities
dominated by cold-water adapted species (whitefish, burbot, and charr) to investigate
changes in the relative importance of the cool-water perch during the last 30 years
of rapid warming in high latitude lakes. In addition, we studied the individual-level
responses to warming to clarify the potential mechanisms underlying the population
effects. Our long-term series (1991–2020) reveal a marked increase in numerical importance of the cool-water fish species, perch, in ten out of eleven populations, and in
most fish communities perch is now dominant. Moreover, we show that climate warming affects population-level processes via direct and indirect temperature effects on
individuals. Specifically, the increase in abundance arises from increased recruitment,
faster juvenile growth, and ensuing earlier maturation, all boosted by climate warming. The speed and magnitude of the response to warming in these high latitude fish
communities strongly suggest that cold-water fish will be displaced by fish adapted to
warmer water. Consequently, management should focus on climate adaptation limiting future introductions and invasions of cool-water fish and mitigating harvesting
pressure on cold-water fish.
Forlag
WileySitering
Smalås A, Primicerio R, Kahilainen KK, Terentjev P, Kashulin N, Zubova, Amundsen P-A. Increased importance of cool-water fish at high latitudes emerges from individual-level responses to warming. Ecology and Evolution. 2023;13(6)Metadata
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