Climate Change and invasibility of the Antarctic benthos

Aronson, R.B., Thatje, S., Clarke, A., Peck, L.S., Blake, D.B., Wilga, C.D. and Seibel, B.A. (2007) Climate Change and invasibility of the Antarctic benthos. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics, 38, 129-154. (doi:10.1146/annurev.ecolsys.38.091206.095525)

Download

[file icon]
Preview
PDF
274Kb

Description/Abstract

Benthic communities living in shallow-shelf habitats in Antarctica (<100-m depth) are archaic in their structure and function. Modern predators, including fast-moving, durophagous (skeleton-crushing) bony fish, sharks, and crabs, are rare or absent; slow-moving invertebrates are the top predators; and epifaunal suspension feeders dominate many soft substratum communities. Cooling temperatures beginning in the late Eocene excluded durophagous predators, ultimately resulting in the endemic living fauna and its unique food-web structure. Although the Southern Ocean is oceanographically isolated, the barriers to biological invasion are primarily physiological rather than geographic. Cold temperatures impose limits to performance that exclude modern predators. Global warming is now removing those physiological barriers, and crabs are reinvading Antarctica. As sea temperatures continue to rise, the invasion of durophagous predators will modernize the shelf benthos and erode the indigenous character of marine life in Antarctica.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:0066-4126 (print)
Subjects:Q Science > QH Natural history > QH301 Biology
Divisions:University Structure - Pre August 2011 > School of Ocean & Earth Science (SOC/SOES)
ePrint ID:46999
URI:http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/46999
Deposited On:20 Jul 2007
Last Modified:01 Jun 2011 01:06

Associated Staff Only: edit my ePrint