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Contrasting effects of ocean warming on different components of plant-herbivore interactions

Version 2 2024-06-06, 06:42
Version 1 2017-11-08, 17:06
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-06, 06:42 authored by JF Pagès, TM Smith, F Tomas, N Sanmartí, J Boada, H De Bari, M Pérez, J Romero, R Arthur, T Alcoverro
There is increasing uncertainty of how marine ecosystems will respond to rising temperatures. While studies have focused on the impacts of warming on individual species, knowledge of how species interactions are likely to respond is scant. The strength of even simple two-species interactions is influenced by several interacting mechanisms, each potentially changing with temperature. We used controlled experiments to assess how plant-herbivore interactions respond to temperature for three structural dominant macrophytes in the Mediterranean and their principal sea urchin herbivore. Increasing temperature differentially influenced plant-specific growth, sea urchin growth and metabolism, consumption rates and herbivore preferences, but not movement behaviour. Evaluating these empirical observations against conceptual models of plant-herbivore performance, it appears likely that while the strength of herbivory may increase for the tested macroalga, for the two dominant seagrasses, the interaction strength may remain relatively unchanged or even weaken as temperatures rise. These results show a clear set of winners and losers in the warming Mediterranean as the complex factors driving species interactions change.

History

Journal

Marine pollution bulletin

Volume

134

Pagination

55-65

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0025-326X

eISSN

1879-3363

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2017, Elsevier Ltd.

Publisher

Elsevier