Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento:
http://hdl.handle.net/10553/135606
Título: | Irreversible loss in marine ecosystem habitability after a temperature overshoot | Autores/as: | Santana Falcón, Yeray Yamamoto, Akitomo Lenton, Andrew Jones, Chris D. Burger, Friedrich A. John, Jasmin G. Tjiputra, Jerry Schwinger, Jörg Kawamiya, Michio Frölicher, Thomas L. Ziehn, Tilo Séférian, Roland |
Clasificación UNESCO: | 251003 Oceanografía descriptiva | Palabras clave: | Climate-change ecology Climate-change impacts Ocean sciences |
Fecha de publicación: | 2023 | Proyectos: | European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme with the COMFORT project under the grant agreement No 820989 | Publicación seriada: | Communications Earth and Environment | Resumen: | Anthropogenic warming of the oceans and associated deoxygenation are altering marine ecosystems. Current knowledge suggests these changes may be reversible on a centennial timescale at the ocean surface but irreversible at deeper depths even if global warming were to ameliorate. In contrast, the marine ecosystem’s response to these persistent changes remains poorly elucidated. Here we explore to what extent global warming may drive alterations in marine habitats by exploring the evolution of a metabolic index that captures marine organisms’ ecophysiological response to both temperature and oxygen changes, throughout an idealised ramp-up/ramp-down atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration and an overshoot scenarios. Using a multi-model approach; we find that changes in ocean temperature and oxygen drive a centuries-long irreversible loss in the habitable volume of the upper 1000 m of the world ocean. These results suggest that the combined effect of warming and deoxygenation will have profound and long-lasting impacts on the viability of marine ecosystems, well after global temperatures have peaked. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/135606 | ISSN: | 2662-4435 | DOI: | 10.1038/s43247-023-01002-1 | Fuente: | Communications Earth and Environment [ISSN 2662-4435], v. 4, 343, (Octubre 2023) |
Colección: | Artículos |
Citas SCOPUSTM
14
actualizado el 30-mar-2025
Citas de WEB OF SCIENCETM
Citations
12
actualizado el 30-mar-2025
Google ScholarTM
Verifica
Altmetric
Comparte
Exporta metadatos
Los elementos en ULPGC accedaCRIS están protegidos por derechos de autor con todos los derechos reservados, a menos que se indique lo contrario.