Abstract

Planktonic foraminifera are one of the primary calcifiers in the modern ocean, contributing 23%-56% of total global pelagic carbonate production. However, a mechanistic understanding of how physiology and environmental conditions control their abundance and distribution is lacking, hindering the projection of the impact of future climate change. This understanding is important, not only for ecosystem dynamics, but also for marine carbon cycling because of foraminifera's key role in carbonate production. Here we present and apply a global trait-based ecosystem model of non-spinose planktonic foraminifera ('ForamEcoGEnIE') to assess their ecology and global distribution under future climate change. ForamEcoGEnIE considers the traits of calcium carbonate production, shell size, and foraging. It captures the main characteristic of biogeographical patterns of non-spinose species - with maximum biomass concentrations found in mid- to high-latitude waters and upwelling areas. The model also reproduces the magnitude of global carbonate production relatively well, although the foraminifera standing stock is systematically overestimated. In response to future scenarios of rising atmospheric CO2 (RCP6 and RCP8.5), on a regional scale, the modelled foraminifera biomass and export flux increases in the subpolar regions of the North Atlantic and the Southern Ocean while it decreases everywhere else. In the absence of adaptation, the biomass decline in the low-latitude South Pacific suggests extirpation. The model projects a global average loss in non-spinose foraminifera biomass between 8% (RCP6) and 11% (RCP8.5) by 2050 and between 14% and 18% by 2100 as a response to ocean warming and associated changes in primary production and ecological dynamics. Global calcium carbonate flux associated with non-spinose foraminifera declines by 13%-18% by 2100. That decline can slow down the ocean carbonate pump and create short-term positive feedback on rising atmospheric pCO2 .

Highlights

  • We developed the first Earth System model which includes a trait-­ based ecosystem model of planktonic foraminifera

  • We assessed the environmental controls on modern non-­spinose foraminifera and found that their distribution can be explained by the dynamics of the plankton community, followed by temperature and phosphate

  • In response to future climate change, the model suggests that the biomass of non-­spinose foraminifera decreases by 8%–­11% by 2050 and 14%–­18% by 2100 (RCP6.5 and RCP8.5)

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Barker & Elderfield, 2002; Bijma et al, 1999; De Moel et al, 2009; Lombard et al, 2010; Moy et al, 2009; Russell et al, 2004; Spero et al, 1997), others suggest a combination of multiple environmental drivers (Davis et al.,2013; Weinkauf & Waniek, 2016; Zarkogiannis et al, 2019 and references within; Fox et al, 2020) We focus on symbiont-­barren non-­spinose foraminifera as this reduces the number of different traits (and associated uncertain trade-­ offs) that must be accounted for in the model (e.g. spines, symbiosis)

| METHODS
| RESULTS
Findings
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