Litcius/Paper detail

Natural selection could determine whether <i>Acropora</i> corals persist under expected climate change

Liam Lachs, Yves‐Marie Bozec, John C. Bythell, Simon D. Donner, Holly K. East, Alasdair J. Edwards, Yimnang Golbuu, Marine Gouezo, James R. Guest, Adriana Humanes, Cynthia Riginos, Peter J. Mumby

2024Science33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Marine heatwaves are intensifying under climate change, exposing populations of reef-building corals to mass mortality and intense selective pressure. It remains unknown whether adaptation can keep pace with warming and maintain reef functioning. We have developed an eco-evolutionary metapopulation model for Acropora , an ecologically important yet thermally sensitive coral taxon. We found that, although corals have some adaptation capacity, they will suffer severe heatwave-induced declines over the coming decades. For a future in which emissions lead to ~3°C of global warming, natural selection could allow populations to persist, albeit in severely depleted states with elevated extinction risk and potential loss of ecosystem functioning. Yet, for thermally sensitive coral populations to thrive beyond 2050, there must be rapid reductions of greenhouse gas emissions that limit global warming to 2°C.

Topics & Concepts

Threatened speciesClimate changeAcroporaReefEcologyCoralExtinction (optical mineralogy)Global warmingScleractiniaCoral reefEcosystemBiologyEnvironmental scienceHabitatCnidariaPaleontologyCoral and Marine Ecosystems StudiesMarine and fisheries researchOcean Acidification Effects and Responses