Award: PLR-1316141

Award Title: Ocean Acidification: Century Scale Impacts to Ecosystem Structure and Function of Aleutian Kelp Forests
Funding Source: NSF Arctic Sciences (NSF ARC)
Program Manager: Henrietta N. Edmonds

Outcomes Report

Intellectual Merit: Climate change and predator loss are reshaping global ecosystems, yet the combined impacts of these stressors are rarely considered. Thus, over the 3-year duration of this project, we studied how kelp forests of the Aleutian Archipelago (Alaska) are being altered by the combined influence of ocean warming, ocean acidification, and the loss of a keystone predator (the sea otter). We focused on impacts to Clathromorphum nereostratum, a long-lived (millennia in some cases) calcifying alga that forms the structural base of the ecosystem and contains an archive of past temperature, structural integrity, and grazing intensity in its calcified matrix. Using field observations, we revealed that with the recent collapse of sea otter populations and resulting proliferation of sea urchins in the ecosystem, long-livedClathromorphum reefs are now being rapidly eroded by urchin grazing. In much the same way that tree rings have been used to reconstruct longer term historical events in terrestrial ecosystems, we then used urchin grazing scars that are faithfully preserved in Clathromorphum?s calcified matrix (with annual resolution) toreconstruct past grazing intensity in the ecosystem. Our reconstructionsestablish that reef bioerosion over the past half-century was strongly linked to the wax and wane of sea otters and the trophic cascade that ensued. We then went on to show experimentally that ocean warming and acidification have recently accelerated the process of reef bioerosion, and will continue to do so in the near-future. Our findings thus indicate that without sea otter recovery, Clathromorphumreefs will become extinct sooner than predicted from climate change alone. Such findings highlight the importance of large predators in nature. They also indicate that scientists will benefit from incorporating predator-prey interactions into climate change studies, given that such interactions can strongly magnify or attenuate the physiological impacts of climate change in marine food webs. Broader Impacts:One postdoctoral researcher, three graduate students, and two undergraduate students received education experiences and technical training as part of this project. This group of trainees were comprised of ~65% females, with multiple individuals hailing from groups underrepresented in the sciences. To disseminate our findings, we have given numerous talks based on the results of our work, including public presentations (i.e., local science cafés and public forums), talks at scientific meetings (i.e., two Gordon Research Conferences and a Pew Charitable Trust meeting), departmental seminars at universities (University of Maine, University of California Santa Cruz, University of Michigan, Northeastern University, Harvard University) including non-traditional student universities (University of Massachusetts – Boston, Maine Maritime Academy), lectures to undergraduate classes (University of Maine, Colby College), and presentations to state and federal agencies (Maine Department of Marine Resources, U.S. State Department). To disseminate our findings more broadly, we collaborated with a documentary film maker (Compass Light Productions) to capture the essence of our work and make it available to the general public. We also helped publish an article through NSF?s Polar Program, and have worked closely with National Geographic Kids to disseminate our results in a cover story for the magazine (slated for release in August 2019). Several manuscripts (including one in review at Science) have been produced from this research. We anticipate their publication (and associated popular media articles) in 2019 and 2020. Last Modified: 01/29/2019 Submitted by: Robert S Steneck
DatasetLatest Version DateCurrent State
Sea urchin density at central and western Aleutian Islands, Alaska from visual surveys, July 20142019-01-30Final no updates expected
Sea urchin biomass at central and western Aleutian Islands, Alaska from visual surveys, July 20142019-01-30Final no updates expected
Kelp forest community structure at central and western Aleutian Islands, Alaska from visual surveys, July 20142019-01-30Final no updates expected
Sea urchin density at each site studied with respect to Clathromorphum bioerosion, at central and western Aleutian Islands, Alaska from visual surveys, July 20142019-01-30Final no updates expected
Sea urchin size and biomass with respect to Clathromorphum bioerosion at central and western Aleutian Islands, Alaska from visual surveys, July 20142019-01-30Final no updates expected
Kelp forest community structure studied with respect to Clathromorphum bioerosion at central and western Aleutian Islands, Alaska from visual surveys, July 20142019-01-30Final no updates expected
Sea urchin bio-erosion of Clathromorphum nereostratum skeleton at central and western Aleutian Islands, Alaska from visual surveys, July 20142019-01-30Final no updates expected
Historical reconstruction of sea urchin grazing events in Aleutian Island ecosystem from grazing scars, 1965-20042019-02-13Final no updates expected
Laboratory study of estimates of per capita sea urchin grazing rates on Clathromorphum nereostratum, evaluated as a function of sea urchin size2019-02-13Final no updates expected
Experimental study to estimate per capita sea urchin (Strongylocentrotus polyacanthus) grazing rates on the alga Clathromorphum nereostratum as a function of seawater temperature and pCO2 concentration2019-02-13Final no updates expected
The density (mg CaCO3/cm^3) of the skeleton of Clathromorphum nereostratum, when assessed as function of increasing seawater temperature and pCO2 concentration2019-02-13Final no updates expected
Estimates of island-wide sea otter population density as surveyed with boats circumnavigating nine focal islands within the central and western Aleutian Islands (Alaska) from 1991-2015.2021-01-26Final no updates expected
Clathromorphum compactum and C. nereostratum calcification experiment data involving multiple temperatures and pCO2 levels (CorallineAlgaePaleo-pH)2022-04-04Final no updates expected
Experimental tank parameters throughout the life of Clathromorphum compactum and C. nereostratum calcification experiment from from 2015-2016 (CorallineAlgaePaleo-pH project)2022-04-04Final no updates expected

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Principal Investigator: Robert S. Steneck (University of Maine)

Co-Principal Investigator: James A Estes