6533b7d6fe1ef96bd12665ef

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Ocean acidification through the lens of ecological theory

Megan L. H. VaughanJames P. BarryKatharina E. FabriciusJason Hall Hall-spencerBayden D. RussellNorah E. M. BrownJennifer M. SundayBrian GaylordMarco MilazzoKathryn AndersonSam DupontChristopher D. G. HarleyKristy J. KroekerEric SanfordTerrie KlingerSebastian J. SchreiberSteven WiddicombeSean D. ConnellPhilip L. MundayVengatesen Thiyagarajan

subject

Ecology (disciplines)AcclimatizationOceans and SeasClimate ChangePopulationecological modelselevated carbon dioxideClimate changeContext (language use)BiologyEcological systems theoryenvironmental threatsModels Biologicalecological theoriesModelsanthropogenic climate changeAnthropogenic climate changeAnimalsEcosystemSeawaterGlobal environmental changeeducationLife Below WaterEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsEcosystemEcological modeleducation.field_of_studyEvolutionary BiologyEcologymarine stressorsEcologyEnvironmental threatMedicine (all)Global warmingglobal environmental changeElevated carbon dioxideOcean acidificationBiologicalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicMarine stressorEcological ApplicationsEcological theorie

description

© 2015 by the Ecological Society of America. Ocean acidification, chemical changes to the carbonate system of seawater, is emerging as a key environmental challenge accompanying global warming and other humaninduced perturbations. Considerable research seeks to define the scope and character of potential outcomes from this phenomenon, but a crucial impediment persists. Ecological theory, despite its power and utility, has been only peripherally applied to the problem. Here we sketch in broad strokes several areas where fundamental principles of ecology have the capacity to generate insight into ocean acidification's consequences. We focus on conceptual models that, when considered in the context of acidification, yield explicit predictions regarding a spectrum of population- and community-level effects, from narrowing of species ranges and shifts in patterns of demographic connectivity, to modified consumer-resource relationships, to ascendance of weedy taxa and loss of species diversity. Although our coverage represents only a small fraction of the breadth of possible insights achievable from the application of theory, our hope is that this initial foray will spur expanded efforts to blend experiments with theoretical approaches. The result promises to be a deeper and more nuanced understanding of ocean acidification and the ecological changes it portends.

http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/5zs5m5xj