Ocean warming studies may be missing the mark when it comes to understanding how marine life truly responds to rapid climate change. A recent analysis of decades of ocean warming experiments reveals a critical oversight: the speed at which these experiments are conducted. The findings highlight a significant discrepancy between the controlled heating rates in labs and the slow, gradual warming of the ocean itself.
The study, led by Isabelle M. Côté, a marine ecology professor at Simon Fraser University, examined 48 published experiments on chronic ocean warming, focusing on 11 broad groups of marine life. The key finding? Most experiments ramped up temperatures at a rate far faster than what occurs in the natural world, missing the crucial aspect of the warming pace.
This rapid heating in labs often leads to a misunderstanding of the long-term effects of climate change on marine ecosystems. For instance, when animals are abruptly exposed to warmer water without a gradual warm-up, their reproductive rates plummet. However, when the same temperature increase is delivered slowly, over a couple of days per degree, the negative impact on reproduction diminishes.
The study also found that survival rates were not significantly affected by the heating pace, but the damage to the organisms was more pronounced when the warming was rapid. Additionally, the abundance of populations and photosynthesis rates in seaweeds and other plant-like organisms were more negatively impacted by rapid warming compared to gradual warming.
The researchers concluded that these experiments, designed to track long-term warming, are actually capturing acute heat stress rather than chronic warming. Chronic warming, which occurs year after year and affects generation after generation, is what the ocean is experiencing. This distinction is crucial for accurate predictions of marine biodiversity.
The implications of this finding are far-reaching. Climate predictions for marine biodiversity, which influence fisheries quotas and reef restoration efforts, may be overestimating the near-term collapse of certain processes and missing it in others. The study calls for a rethinking of climate change experiments, suggesting that future experiments should slow down the ramping process, report the ramping speed clearly, or move to wild settings to better reflect the natural pace of warming.
This research highlights the importance of accurately simulating the pace of climate change in experiments. By doing so, scientists can improve the accuracy of their predictions and better understand the complex responses of marine life to a rapidly warming ocean.