The Geography of Mediterranean Benthic Communities Under Climate Change
Damiano Baldan, Yohann Chauvier‐Mendes, Diego Panzeri, Gianpiero Cossarini, Cosimo Solidoro, Vinko Bandelj

TL;DR
This study predicts how climate change will shift Mediterranean seafloor species northward, affecting biodiversity and guiding conservation strategies.
Contribution
The paper introduces a comprehensive projection of benthic species distribution changes in the Mediterranean using advanced models and extensive data.
Findings
Most benthic species are projected to shift northwards due to rising temperatures and oxygen changes.
Cold-adapted species face range contraction and deeper water shifts, while warm-adapted species expand and move shallower.
α-diversity increases in the North and decreases in the South Mediterranean, with significant community turnover in specific regions.
Abstract
Seafloors are crucial to marine ecosystems for the functions and services they provide. Benthic organisms, vital to these ecosystems, are particularly vulnerable to climate change. Rising temperatures, ocean acidification, and shifting currents disrupt benthic species and communities, yet future related impact assessments remain limited. Here, we trained species distribution models with predictors from state of the art physical and biogeochemical marine models and a large database of species records (> 100,000 occurrences) to project the current and future distributions of ~350 benthic species (excluding cephalopods, invasive species, and commercially exploited species) and their related changes per site in diversity (α‐) and community composition (β‐diversity) over the Mediterranean Sea. We predicted most species to shift their distribution northwards for all future scenarios due to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCephalopods and Marine Biology · Species Distribution and Climate Change · Marine and fisheries research
