Abstract

Seagrass communities are a vital component of estuarine ecosystems, but are threatened by projected sea level rise (SLR) and temperature increases with climate change. To understand these potential effects, we developed a spatially explicit model that represents seagrass (Zostera marina) habitat and estuary-wide productivity for Barnegat Bay-Little Egg Harbor (BB-LEH) in New Jersey, USA. Our modeling approach included an offline coupling of a numerical seagrass biomass model with the spatially variable environmental conditions from a hydrodynamic model to calculate above and belowground biomass at each grid cell of the hydrodynamic model domain. Once calibrated to represent present day seagrass habitat and estuary-wide annual productivity, we applied combinations of increasing air temperature and sea level following regionally specific climate change projections, enabling analysis of the individual and combined impacts of these variables on seagrass biomass and spatial coverage. Under the SLR scenarios, the current model domain boundaries were maintained, as the land surrounding BB-LEH is unlikely to shift significantly in the future. SLR caused habitat extent to decrease dramatically, pushing seagrass beds towards the coastline with increasing depth, with a 100% loss of habitat by the maximum SLR scenario. The dramatic loss of seagrass habitat under SLR was in part due to the assumption that surrounding land would not be inundated, as the model did not allow for habitat expansion outside the current boundaries of the bay. Temperature increases slightly elevated the rate of summer die-off and decreased habitat area only under the highest temperature increase scenarios. In combined scenarios, the effects of SLR far outweighed the effects of temperature increase. Sensitivity analysis of the model revealed the greatest sensitivity to changes in parameters affecting light limitation and seagrass mortality, but no sensitivity to changes in nutrient limitation constants. The high vulnerability of seagrass in the bay to SLR exceeded that demonstrated for other systems, highlighting the importance of site- and region-specific assessments of estuaries under climate change.

Highlights

  • Seagrass meadows are prevalent in estuarine ecosystems along continental coastlines around the globe and play a substantial role in ecosystem structure and functioning (Short et al, 2007; Schmidt et al, 2011; Nordlund et al, 2016)

  • Wedderburn number (We) focused our analyses on temperature scenarios +1.5, +4.0, and +6.0◦C, as +1.5◦C is the temperature increase identified as a goal for mitigating the effects of climate change, and +4.0 and +6.0◦C are close to the temperature increases predicted for Eastern North America under intermediate (RCP4.5) and high (RCP8.5) emissions scenarios (IPCC, 2013)

  • The simplified seagrass biomass production model, coupled with a spatially explicit hydrodynamic model, provided a theoretical framework to assess the influences of climate change on seagrass viability in Barnegat Bay-Little Egg Harbor (BB-LEH)

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Summary

Introduction

Seagrass meadows are prevalent in estuarine ecosystems along continental coastlines around the globe and play a substantial role in ecosystem structure and functioning (Short et al, 2007; Schmidt et al, 2011; Nordlund et al, 2016). As the prominent primary producer in many shallow coastal estuaries, seagrass moderates nitrogen and carbon cycling, while sequestering carbon over annual and longer timescales (Short et al, 2007; Schmidt et al, 2011; Fourqurean et al, 2012). Seagrass meadows provide essential habitat and food sources to other species, including many listed as threatened or endangered (Hughes et al, 2009). Further stress from anthropogenic climate change threatens seagrass populations, with cascading effects throughout shallow coastal ecosystems (McGlathery et al, 2013; Ondiviela et al, 2014)

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