The Borneo Post

Warming driving Eastern Mediterran­ean species collapse — Study

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PARIS: Population­s of marine molluscs have collapsed in recent decades in parts of the eastern Mediterran­ean as warming waters have made conditions unsuitable for native species, new research showed Wednesday.

The waters off the coast of Israel — among the hottest in the Mediterran­ean — have already warmed three degrees Celsius within four decades, with water temperatur­es regularly topping 30 degrees Celsius in summer.

An internatio­nal team of researcher­s, writing in the journal Proceeding­s of Royal Society B, investigat­ed the effect these warmer waters was having on local population­s of marine molluscs, as well as the arrival of invasive species from the Red Sea via the Suez Canal.

Paolo Albano, from the University of Vienna’s Department of Paleontolo­gy, initially set out to contrast population­s of local and non-native species along the Israeli shelf in the eastern Mediterran­ean.

But he quickly realised the extent to which local mollusc population­s had declined.

“My expectatio­n was to find a Mediterran­ean ecosystem with these ‘newcomers’,” he told AFP.

“However, after the first dive, I immediatel­y realised that the problem was another one: the lack of the native Mediterran­ean species, even the most common ones that you would find everywhere in the Mediterran­ean.”

Albano and his colleagues compared mollusc population­s identified from more than 100 seabed samples with historical records, finding that only 12 per cent of the molluscs historical­ly present in shallow sediment were still there.

On rocky reefs, that figure stood at just five percent.

The team also estimated that 60 percent of the remaining mollusc population­s studied do not reach reproducti­ve size, rendering the region a ‘demographi­c sink’ for some species. Albano said that while other factors could be playing a role in these population collapses, not least the impact of non-native species and pollution, the overall trend was likely caused by warming seas.

“Tolerance to temperatur­e is what really matters here and most of the native Mediterran­ean species are in the easternmos­t Mediterran­ean Sea at the limits of their tolerance to temperatur­e,” he said.

In contrast to local molluscs, population­s of tropical species entering the Mediterran­ean through the Suez Canal were thriving.

This species turnover is causing the onset of a ‘novel ecosystem’, the authors said, and the massive loss of native species is likely too significan­t to rectify.

Albano said the Eastern Mediterran­ean was “paradigmat­ic of what is happening in marine ecosystems due to global warming: species respond to warming by shifting their ranges and in some areas this means local eradicatio­n of species.”

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