Oceanographic connectivity strongly restricts future range expansions of critical marine forest species
Jorge Assis, Eliza Fragkopoulou, Ester A. Serrão, Miguel B. Araújo

TL;DR
Ocean currents strongly limit the ability of marine forest species to expand their ranges in response to climate change.
Contribution
A novel framework linking species distribution and biophysical connectivity models to assess marine species redistribution.
Findings
Habitat loss for seagrasses and brown macroalgae could reach 50% and 58%, respectively, under high emissions.
Oceanographic connectivity reduces range expansion by up to 64% in distance for macroalgae.
Dispersal barriers prevent expansions into suitable regions like the Arctic and New Zealand.
Abstract
Climate change is driving a global redistribution of marine biodiversity. As habitats shift, oceanographic connectivity (the transport of dispersive stages via ocean currents) becomes a critical, yet poorly understood, factor that can either facilitate or hinder species’ expansions into new areas. To quantify this influence, we developed a framework linking species distribution models with biophysical connectivity models to examine the redistribution of 467 marine forest species (seagrasses and brown macroalgae) under end-of-century climate change scenarios. Our projections show substantial habitat loss for both groups, reaching up to 50% (seagrasses) and 58% (brown macroalgae) of current habitats under higher emissions. Despite potential poleward expansions, oceanographic connectivity emerges as a major limiting factor. Accounting for average dispersal duration, range expansions are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpecies Distribution and Climate Change · Marine and coastal plant biology · Coral and Marine Ecosystems Studies
