Climate, Oxygen, and the Future of Marine Biodiversity.


Journal article


C. Deutsch, J. Penn, Noelle M. Lucey
Annual Review of Marine Science, 2023

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APA   Click to copy
Deutsch, C., Penn, J., & Lucey, N. M. (2023). Climate, Oxygen, and the Future of Marine Biodiversity. Annual Review of Marine Science.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Deutsch, C., J. Penn, and Noelle M. Lucey. “Climate, Oxygen, and the Future of Marine Biodiversity.” Annual Review of Marine Science (2023).


MLA   Click to copy
Deutsch, C., et al. “Climate, Oxygen, and the Future of Marine Biodiversity.” Annual Review of Marine Science, 2023.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{c2023a,
  title = {Climate, Oxygen, and the Future of Marine Biodiversity.},
  year = {2023},
  journal = {Annual Review of Marine Science},
  author = {Deutsch, C. and Penn, J. and Lucey, Noelle M.}
}

Abstract

The ocean enabled the diversification of life on Earth by adding O2 to the atmosphere, yet marine species remain most subject to O2 limitation. Human industrialization is intensifying the aerobic challenges to marine ecosystems by depleting the ocean's O2 inventory through the global addition of heat and local addition of nutrients. Historical observations reveal an ∼2% decline in upper-ocean O2 and accelerating reports of coastal mass mortality events. The dynamic balance of O2 supply and demand provides a unifying framework for understanding these phenomena across scales from the global ocean to individual organisms. Using this framework, we synthesize recent advances in forecasting O2 loss and its impacts on marine biogeography, biodiversity, and biogeochemistry. We also highlight three outstanding uncertainties: how long-term global climate change intensifies metabolic storms, how differential species O2 sensitivities alter the structure of ecological communities, and how global O2 loss intersects with coastal eutrophication. Projecting these interacting impacts on future marine ecosystems requires integration of climate dynamics, biogeochemistry, physiology, and ecology, evaluated with an eye on Earth history. Reducing global and local impacts of warming and O2 loss will be essential if humankind is to preserve the health and biodiversity of the future ocean. Expected final online publication date for the Annual Review of Marine Science, Volume 16 is January 2024. Please see http://www.annualreviews.org/page/journal/pubdates for revised estimates.