Abstract

Global climate change is a key driver of change in coastal waters with clear effects on biological communities and marine ecosystems. Human activities in combination with climate change exert a tremendous pressure on marine ecosystems and threaten their integrity, structure, and functioning. The protection of these ecosystems is a major target of the 14th United Nations sustainable development goal “Conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development.” However, due to the complexity of processes and interactions of stressors, the status assessment of ecosystems remains a challenge. Holistic food web models, including biological and environmental data, could provide a suitable basis to assess ecosystem health. Here, we review climate change impacts on different trophic levels of coastal ecosystems ranging from plankton to ecologically and economically important fish and shellfish species. Furthermore, we show different food web model approaches, their advantages and limitations. To effectively manage coastal ecosystems, we need both a detailed knowledge base of each trophic level and a holistic modeling approach for assessment and prediction of future scenarios on food web-scales. A new model approach with a seamless coupling of physical ocean models and food web models could provide a future tool for guiding ecosystem-based management.

Highlights

  • The complexity of the direct and indirect effects of global climate change on marine ecosystems and the immense diversity of scales call for novel multifaceted views and the combination of different types of analyses via models

  • Results ranged from a cod dominated food web with reduced nutrient levels and phytoplankton biomass close to today in the best case, to a sprat dominated, severely eutrophicated system in the worst case highlighting the importance of management strategies with regard to climate change

  • Holistic food web model studies focusing on the impacts of climate change on the system’s structure and functioning are still scarce

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Summary

Introduction

The complexity of the direct and indirect effects of global climate change on marine ecosystems and the immense diversity of scales call for novel multifaceted views and the combination of different types of analyses via models. Based on their importance for food web functioning and the provision of ES (Atkins et al, 2015; Turner et al, 2015), we focus on climate induced changes of plankton communities, and of ecologically and economically important fish and shellfish species and their trophic interactions.

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