Impaired ecosystem process despite little effects on populations: modeling combined effects of warming and toxicants
Authored by Volker Grimm, Valery E Forbes, Nika Galic
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13581
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Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
ODD
Mathematical description
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Abstract
Freshwater ecosystems are exposed to many stressors, including toxic
chemicals and global warming, which can impair, separately or in
combination, important processes in organisms and hence higher levels of
organization. Investigating combined effects of warming and toxicants
has been a topic of little research, but neglecting their combined
effects may seriously misguide management efforts. To explore how toxic
chemicals and warming, alone and in combination, propagate across levels
of biological organization, including a key ecosystem process, we
developed an individual-based model (IBM) of a freshwater amphipod
detritivore, Gammarus pseudolimnaeus, feeding on leaf litter. In this
IBM, life history emerges from the individuals' energy budgets. We
quantified, in different warming scenarios (+1-+4 degrees C), the
effects of hypothetical toxicants on suborganismal processes, including
feeding, somatic and maturity maintenance, growth, and reproduction.
Warming reduced mean adult body sizes and population abundance and
biomass, but only in the warmest scenarios. Leaf litter processing, a
key contributor to ecosystem functioning and service delivery in
streams, was consistently enhanced by warming, through strengthened
interaction between the detritivorous consumer and its resource.
Toxicant effects on feeding and maintenance resulted in initially small
adverse effects on consumers, but ultimately led to population
extinction and loss of ecosystem process. Warming in combination with
toxicants had little effect at the individual and population levels, but
ecosystem process was impaired in the warmer scenarios. Our results
suggest that exposure to the same amount of toxicants can
disproportionately compromise ecosystem processing depending on global
warming scenarios; for example, reducing organismal feeding rates by
50\% will reduce resource processing by 50\% in current temperature
conditions, but by up to 200\% with warming of 4 degrees C. Our study
has implications for assessing and monitoring impacts of chemicals on
ecosystems facing global warming. We advise complementing existing
monitoring approaches with directly quantifying ecosystem processes and
services.
Tags
Individual-based model
Population dynamics
Ecosystem services
Climate-change
Daphnia-magna
Life-history
Responses
Body-size
Ecological risk-assessment
Natural stressors
Multiple stressors
Dynamic energy budgets
Freshwater ecosystems
Leaf litter processing
Gammarus-pseudolimnaeus bousfield
Energy
budget theory
Litter
decomposition