View : 253 Download: 0

Jeju Island: a sentinel for tracking ocean warming impacts on high-latitude benthic communities

Title
Jeju Island: a sentinel for tracking ocean warming impacts on high-latitude benthic communities
Authors
Ribas-DeulofeuLaurianeLoubeyresMathildeDenisVianneyDe PalmasStéphaneHwangSung-JinWooSeonockSongJun-ImChenChaolun Allen
Ewha Authors
송준임
SCOPUS Author ID
송준임scopus
Issue Date
2023
Journal Title
Coral Reefs
ISSN
0722-4028JCR Link
Citation
Coral Reefs vol. 42, no. 5, pp. 1097 - 1112
Keywords
Hermatypic coralsHigh-latitude communitiesKelpOcean warmingSouth Korea
Publisher
Institute for Ionics
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
As climate changes and anthropogenic pressures increase, marine ecosystem assembly and functioning are altered. High-latitude areas may provide opportunities for some tropical and subtropical organisms to survive. Yet, it is difficult to assess ongoing changes as ecological baselines are often missing. Here, we focus on the rapidly warming region of Jeju Island (South Korea), where thermal changes may have already triggered a poleward expansion of tropical and subtropical taxa and changes in community assembly. In 2012–2014, an island-wide quantitative description of its benthic communities (5 m and 15 m depths) was made, whereas patterns in seawater temperatures were examined from 1981 to 2020. Jeju Island algal assemblage was dominated by the regionally endemic kelp, Ecklonia cava. Turf, encrusting coralline algae, alongside tropical, subtropical, and cosmopolitan macro-algae were also major components of the benthic community. Hermatypic coral cover was higher at the 15 m depth than 5 m depth. Increases in seawater temperatures were highly significant, with differences between the average annual SST [1980–2020] and annual SST reaching up to + 1.61 °C in only 40 yr. The thermal rise was more pronounced in winter than summer, and warming was further accompanied by a major decline in the number of days below 14 °C and 18 °C, which are considered critical thermal thresholds for hermatypic coral survival and reef development, respectively. Warming winter seawater temperatures could ultimately lead to a loss of seasonality and profound modifications of benthic assemblages. This study provides the necessary assessment of benthic community conditions at Jeju Island upon which the ongoing changes in the area can be explicitly demonstrated. © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to International Coral Reef Society (ICRS).
DOI
10.1007/s00338-023-02400-9
Appears in Collections:
자연과학대학 > 생명과학전공 > Journal papers
Files in This Item:
There are no files associated with this item.
Export
RIS (EndNote)
XLS (Excel)
XML


qrcode

BROWSE