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      Global warming generates predictable extinctions of warm‐ and cold‐water marine benthic invertebrates via thermal habitat loss

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          Climate change impacts on marine ecosystems.

          In marine ecosystems, rising atmospheric CO2 and climate change are associated with concurrent shifts in temperature, circulation, stratification, nutrient input, oxygen content, and ocean acidification, with potentially wide-ranging biological effects. Population-level shifts are occurring because of physiological intolerance to new environments, altered dispersal patterns, and changes in species interactions. Together with local climate-driven invasion and extinction, these processes result in altered community structure and diversity, including possible emergence of novel ecosystems. Impacts are particularly striking for the poles and the tropics, because of the sensitivity of polar ecosystems to sea-ice retreat and poleward species migrations as well as the sensitivity of coral-algal symbiosis to minor increases in temperature. Midlatitude upwelling systems, like the California Current, exhibit strong linkages between climate and species distributions, phenology, and demography. Aggregated effects may modify energy and material flows as well as biogeochemical cycles, eventually impacting the overall ecosystem functioning and services upon which people and societies depend.
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            Climate change affects marine fishes through the oxygen limitation of thermal tolerance.

            A cause-and-effect understanding of climate influences on ecosystems requires evaluation of thermal limits of member species and of their ability to cope with changing temperatures. Laboratory data available for marine fish and invertebrates from various climatic regions led to the hypothesis that, as a unifying principle, a mismatch between the demand for oxygen and the capacity of oxygen supply to tissues is the first mechanism to restrict whole-animal tolerance to thermal extremes. We show in the eelpout, Zoarces viviparus, a bioindicator fish species for environmental monitoring from North and Baltic Seas (Helcom), that thermally limited oxygen delivery closely matches environmental temperatures beyond which growth performance and abundance decrease. Decrements in aerobic performance in warming seas will thus be the first process to cause extinction or relocation to cooler waters.
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              Declining oxygen in the global ocean and coastal waters

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Global Change Biology
                Global Change Biology
                Wiley
                1354-1013
                1365-2486
                October 2022
                July 19 2022
                October 2022
                : 28
                : 19
                : 5793-5807
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Museum für Naturkunde, Leibniz Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity Science Berlin Germany
                [2 ]GeoZentrum Nordbayern Universität Erlangen‐Nürnberg Erlangen Germany
                [3 ]MTA‐MTM‐ELTE Research Group for Paleontology Budapest Hungary
                Article
                10.1111/gcb.16333
                35851980
                be16f80e-0093-4c55-9b62-be8667a53a3a
                © 2022

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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