Abstract

Fish ecosystems perform ecological functions that are critically important for the sustainability of marine ecosystems, such as global food security and carbon stock. During the 21st century, significant global warming caused by climate change has created pressing challenges for fish ecosystems that threaten species existence and global ecosystem health. Here, we study a coastal fish community in Maizuru Bay, Japan, and investigate the relationships between fluctuations of ST, abundance-based species interactions and salient fish biodiversity. Observations show that a local 20% increase in temperature from 2002 to 2014 underpins a long-term reduction in fish diversity (∼25%) played out by some native and invasive species (e.g. Chinese wrasse) becoming exceedingly abundant; this causes a large decay in commercially valuable species (e.g. Japanese anchovy) coupled to an increase in ecological productivity. The fish community is analyzed considering five temperature ranges to understand its atemporal seasonal sensitivity to ST changes, and long-term trends. An optimal information flow model is used to reconstruct species interaction networks that emerge as topologically different for distinct temperature ranges and species dynamics. Networks for low temperatures are more scale-free compared to ones for intermediate (15-20°C) temperatures in which the fish ecosystem experiences a first-order phase transition in interactions from locally stable to metastable and globally unstable for high temperatures states as suggested by abundance-spectrum transitions. The dynamic dominant eigenvalue of species interactions shows increasing instability for competitive species (spiking in summer due to intermediate-season critical transitions) leading to enhanced community variability and critical slowing down despite higher time-point resilience. Native competitive species whose abundance is distributed more exponentially have the highest total directed interactions and are keystone species (e.g. Wrasse and Horse mackerel) for the most salient links with cooperative decaying species. Competitive species, with higher eco-climatic memory and synchronization, are the most affected by temperature and play an important role in maintaining fish ecosystem stability via multitrophic cascades (via cooperative-competitive species imbalance), and as bioindicators of change. More climate-fitted species follow temperature increase causing larger divergence divergence between competitive and cooperative species. Decreasing dominant eigenvalues and lower relative network optimality for warmer oceans indicate fishery more attracted toward persistent oscillatory states, yet unpredictable, with lower cooperation, diversity and fish stock despite the increase in community abundance due to non-commercial and venomous species. We emphasize how changes in species interaction organization, primarily affected by temperature fluctuations, are the backbone of biodiversity dynamics and yet for functional diversity in contrast to taxonomic richness. Abundance and richness manifest gradual shifts while interactions show sudden shift. The work provides data-driven tools for analyzing and monitoring fish ecosystems under the pressure of global warming or other stressors. Abundance and interaction patterns derived by network-based analyses proved useful to assess ecosystem susceptibility and effective change, and formulate predictive dynamic information for science-based fishery policy aimed to maintain marine ecosystems stable and sustainable.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Impacts of ocean warming on marine fisheriesFish species are a vital component of marine ecosystems and remain one of major sources of food and nutrition feeding hundreds of millions of people around the world

  • It is evident that sea surface and bottom temperature, α-diversity of the fish community fluctuated over time synchronously and seasonally

  • Temperature drives critical slowing down polynomial fitting for α-diversity over temperature; that establishes an empirical Pareto optimal frontier for the climate niche of fish diversity exerted by temperature

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Summary

Introduction

Fish species are a vital component of marine ecosystems and remain one of major sources of food and nutrition feeding hundreds of millions of people around the world. According to annual reports from FAO, the global food fish consumption and average fish consumption per capita increased at an average rate of 3.1% from 1960s, and 1.5% per year, respectively [2] Despite their critical role in maintaining the sustainability of marine ecosystems and global food security, fish ecosystems are all along under increasing anthropogenic pressure from pollution, habitat degradation and climate change that has been steadily warming the sea water. It is imperative to unravel the complex relationships between marine ecosystems and anomalous changes of ST caused by climate change, so that stakeholders can design optimal ecosystem restoration and policy to mitigate the negative effects of climate change on these ecosystems

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