High CO2 to slow tropical fish move to cooler waters

Moorish idol - a coral reef species extending its ranges into temperate Australia under climate change. Image credit: Ericka Coni
Under increasing global warming, tropical fish are escaping warmer seas by extending their habitat ranges towards more temperate waters.
But a new study from the University of Adelaide, published in , shows that the ocean acidification predicted under continuing high CO2 emissions may make cooler, temperate waters less welcoming.
âEvery summer hundreds of tropical fish species extend their range to cooler and temperate regions as the waters of their natural habitat become a little too warm for comfort,â says lead author Ericka Coni, PhD student in the Universityâs School of Biological Sciences. âFor at least two decades, Australian temperate reefs have been receiving new guests from the tropics.
âAs a result of warming, we also see warm-temperate long-spined sea urchins increasing in numbers in southeast Australia, where they overgraze kelp forests and turn them into deserts known as âurchin barrensâ. Coral reef fishes that are expanding their ranges to temperate Australia prefer these barrens over the natural kelp habitats.
âBut what we donât know is how expected ocean acidification, in combination with this warming, will change the temperate habitat composition and consequently the rate of tropical species range-extension into cooler water ecosystems.â
The researchers hypothesised that these two divergent global change forces â warming and acidification â play opposing effects on the rate of tropicalisation of temperate waters.
âBut what we donât know is how expected ocean acidification, in combination with this warming, will change the temperate habitat composition and consequently the rate of tropical species range-extension into cooler water ecosystems.âEricka Coni, lead author
âWe know that as oceans warm they also acidify, because they absorb about a third of the CO2 emissions from fossil-fuel burning,â says Erickaâs PhD supervisor and project leader Professor Ivan Nagelkerken from the Universityâs Environment Institute and Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories.
ĚýâWe also know that calcifying species like sea urchins are typically challenged by seawater with reduced pH levels resulting from elevated CO2.â
The research team, which also included Camilo Ferreira and Professor Sean Connell from the University of Adelaide, and Professor David Booth from the University of Technology Sydney, used two ânatural laboratoriesâ to study ocean warming (tropicalisation hotspots on the south-eastern Australian coast) and ocean acidification predicted for the end of this century (natural CO2 vents off the coast of New Zealand) as an âearly warningâ system to assess the combined consequences of ocean acidification and ocean warming.
They found that sea urchin numbers were reduced by 87% under elevated CO2, leading to a reduction in number and size of urchin barrens. In their place turf algal cover increased which is less preferred by tropical species.
âOur study highlights that it is critical to study climate stressors together â we show that ocean acidification can mitigate some of the ecological effects of ocean warming,â says Professor Nagelkerken.
âFor south-eastern Australia, and likely other temperate waters, this means that ocean acidification could slow down the tropicalisation of temperate ecosystems by coral reef fishes.
âBut in the meantime, if left unabated, these tropical species could increase competition with local temperate species under climate change and reduce their populations.
âIn the short-term we need to take steps to preserve kelp forests to help maintain the biodiversity and populations of temperate species and reduce the invasion of tropical species.â
Professor Ivan Nagelkerken
Southern Seas Ecology Laboratories and Environment Institute
The University of Adelaide
Mobile: +61(0)477 320 551
ivan.nagelkerken@adelaide.edu.au
Robyn Mills
Senior Media and Communications Officer
University of Adelaide
Phone: +61 (0)8 8313 6341, Mobile: +61 (0)410 689 084
robyn.mills@adelaide.edu.au