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Enhanced fish production during a period of extreme global warmth

Earth Sciences

Enhanced fish production during a period of extreme global warmth

G. L. Britten and E. C. Sibert

This groundbreaking study by Gregory L. Britten and Elizabeth C. Sibert reveals a fascinating positive nonlinear correlation between ocean temperature and pelagic fish production during the Early Paleogene Period. Discover how long-term warming might lead to more productive subtropical pelagic ecosystems.... show more
Abstract
Marine ecosystem models predict a decline in fish production with anthropogenic ocean warming, but how fish production equilibrates to warming on longer timescales is unclear. We report a positive nonlinear correlation between ocean temperature and pelagic fish production during the extreme global warmth of the Early Paleogene Period (62–46 million years ago [Ma]). Using data-constrained modeling, we find that temperature-driven increases in trophic transfer efficiency (the fraction of production passed up trophic levels) and primary production can account for the observed increase in fish production, while changes in predator–prey interactions cannot. These data provide new insight into upper-trophic-level processes constrained from the geological record, suggesting that long-term warming may support more productive food webs in subtropical pelagic ecosystems.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Nov 06, 2020
Authors
Gregory L. Britten, Elizabeth C. Sibert
Tags
marine ecosystems
ocean warming
fish production
trophic efficiency
Early Paleogene
pelagic systems
primary production
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