4.7 Article

Substrate-dependent fish have shifted less in distribution under climate change

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY
Volume 3, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-020-01325-1

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Analyses of the impacts of climate change on fish species have primarily considered dynamic oceanographic variables that are the output of predictive models, yet fish species distributions are determined by much more than just variables such as ocean temperature. Functionally diverse species are differentially influenced by oceanographic as well as physiographic variables such as bottom substrate, thereby influencing their ability to shift distributions. Here, we show that fish species distributions that are more associated with bottom substrate than other dynamic environmental variables have shifted significantly less over the last 30 years than species whose distributions are associated with bottom salinity. Correspondingly, species whose distributions are primarily determined by bottom temperature or ocean salinity have shifted their mean centroid and southern and northern range boundaries significantly more than species whose distributions are determined by substrate or depth. The influence of oceanographic versus static variables differs by species functional group, as benthic species distributions are more associated with substrate and they have shifted significantly less than pelagic species whose distributions are primarily associated with ocean temperatures. In conclusion, benthic fish, that are more influenced by substrate, may prove much less likely to shift distributions under future climate change. Roberts et al. use over 30 years of data and nearly 100 fish species to document changes in distribution over time in conjunction with environmental data. Their results show that fish species whose distributions are more associated with bottom substrate were less likely to shift relative to species whose distributions are associated with bottom salinity and temperature, and have implications for future distribution response to climate change.

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