Resumen
Climate change is impacting virtually all marine life. Adaptation strategies will require a robust understanding of the risks to species and ecosystems and how those propagate to human societies. We develop a unified and spatially explicit index to comprehensively evaluate the climate risks to marine life. Under high emissions (SSP5-8.5), almost 90% of ~25,000 species are at high or critical risk, with species at risk across 85% of their native distributions. One tenth of the ocean contains ecosystems where the aggregated climate risk, endemism and extinction threat of their constituent species are high. Climate change poses the greatest risk for exploited species in low-income countries with a high dependence on fisheries. Mitigating emissions (SSP1-2.6) reduces the risk for virtually all species (98.2%), enhances ecosystem stability and disproportionately benefits food-insecure populations in low-income countries. Our climate risk assessment can help prioritize vulnerable species and ecosystems for climate-adapted marine conservation and fisheries management efforts.
Idioma original | English |
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Publicación | Nature Climate Change |
DOI | |
Estado | Accepted/In press - 2022 |
Nota bibliográfica
Funding Information:Financial support to D.G.B. was provided by the Ocean Frontier Institute (Module G) and Oceans North. D.P.T. acknowledges support from the Jarislowsky Foundation and NSERC. S.H. acknowledges support from the National Environmental Research Council (grant no. NE/R015953/1) and from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under grant agreement no. 820989 (COMFORT). This research was enabled in part by support provided by ACENET ( www.ace-net.ca ) and Compute Canada ( www.computecanada.ca ).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, Crown.
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
- Social Sciences (miscellaneous)