‘Sentinels of the sea’ at risk from changing climate
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That is the finding of a new study led by the University of
Nantes, the LEMAR (the Marine Environmental Science Laboratory) in Plouzané and
the Cerfacs (European center for research and advanced training in scientific
computing) in Toulouse (France).
Published in the journal Environmental Research Letters,
the research highlights a novel and comprehensive relationship between climate
variability and historical mortality of adult oysters on the French Atlantic
coast from 1993 to 2015.
The team’s results show oyster mortality usually increases after
warm and wet winters over Northern Europe, affected by recurrent storms
embedded in large weather circulation patterns covering the whole North
Atlantic basin – known as the positive phase of the North Atlantic Oscillation
(NAO).
Click on the links to read about climate change and its effects on lobsters, more lobsters and scallops.
Click on the links to read about climate change and its effects on lobsters, more lobsters and scallops.
The study’s lead author is Dr Yoann Thomas, from the French National Research Institute for Sustainable Development (IRD) at LEMAR. He said: “Benthic species like oysters are keystone species in coastal ecosystems. For example, they build reef habitats, which sustain a high biodiversity, and provide tremendous food source worldwide though fishing or aquaculture activities.
“But they are very sensitive to changes in climate and water
quality, because they cannot move if a location becomes inhospitable. In this
sense, oyster populations are sentinels of long-term climate fluctuations and
climate trends, and more broadly of the ‘health’ of coastal ecosystems.
“We know the NAO is one of the key drivers of ecological
variations like species individual growth rate, geographical distribution,
phenology and survival. We show that recurrent positive NAO episodes in winter,
leading to milder temperatures along the northern European coast, have a
long-lasting effect on the biological and environmental factors influencing
oyster mortality.
“We also show that the cumulative mortality rate over a year
significantly increases after winters dominated by positive NAO. From a
practical perspective, this lagged relationship can be used for potential
predictability of annual mortality at several months lead-time.”
The researchers linked this climate-related risk to several
environmental factors like the unlocking of the winter cold-water barrier for
pathogens, the shortening of the resting phase for oyster, and enhanced
metabolic rates leading to higher vulnerability in spring and summer.
The storms also caused more fresh water to flow from rivers into
the sea, which impacts oysters by lowering the salinity of the water.
By analysing the results of more than 30 climate models and
several greenhouse gases emission scenarios, the team used the extreme winter
temperatures of the present-day NAO+ climate conditions as an analog to produce
forecast assessments of oyster mortality risk factor in the next decades.
Dr Thomas said: “What today are exceptional levels of mortality
could become the norm by 2035, even if the global temperature increase is
limited to ~2°C above the pre-industrial period as per the Paris agreement.
Natural long-term climate variability on top of anthropogenic-induced warming
could ever accelerate or delay the increasing risk by only a decade or so.
He concluded: “The near-future looks bleak, but we show that
this will be even worse without a clear reduction of the greenhouse gases
emissions by human activities. We obviously need to take rapid action now to
avoid further damage to very sensitive and vulnerable coastal ecosystems.”