Article Synopsis

  • The ocean was previously thought to have stable environmental conditions, but new sensing technologies show significant fluctuations in factors like temperature and oxygen that can affect marine life.
  • Advances in research are revealing how these fluctuations can sometimes exceed changes caused by human activities, raising concerns about species' vulnerabilities.
  • The paper reviews how species respond to these variable conditions through physiological and behavioral strategies and identifies gaps in research related to integrating these responses into our understanding of global changes in the ocean.

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Article Abstract

The environmental conditions in the ocean have long been considered relatively more stable through time compared to the conditions on land. Advances in sensing technologies, however, are increasingly revealing substantial fluctuations in abiotic factors over ecologically and evolutionarily relevant timescales in the ocean, leading to a growing recognition of the dynamism of the marine environment as well as new questions about how this dynamism may influence species' vulnerability to global environmental change. In some instances, the diurnal or seasonal variability in major environmental change drivers, such as temperature, pH and seawater carbonate chemistry, and dissolved oxygen, can exceed the changes expected with continued anthropogenic global change. While ocean global change biologists have begun to experimentally test how variability in environmental conditions mediates species' responses to changes in the mean, the extensive literature on species' adaptations to temporal variability in their environment and the implications of this variability for their evolutionary responses has not been well integrated into the field. Here, we review the physiological mechanisms underlying species' responses to changes in temperature, pCO /pH (and other carbonate parameters), and dissolved oxygen, and discuss what is known about behavioral, plastic, and evolutionary strategies for dealing with variable environments. In addition, we discuss how exposure to variability may influence species' responses to changes in the mean conditions and highlight key research needs for ocean global change biology.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.14868DOI Listing

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