Responses of intertidal invertebrates to rising sea surface temperatures in the southeastern Indian Ocean

Introduction: The west coast of Western Australia (WA) is a global hotspot for increasing sea surface temperatures and marine heatwaves. Methods: We used visual survey transects to compare mollusc and echinoderm populations on three coastal intertidal platform reefs on the Perth shoreline with two i...

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Main Authors: Wells, Fred, Keesing, John, Gagnon, Monique, Bessey, C., Spilsbury, Francis, Irvine, T.R.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2023
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/93606
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author Wells, Fred
Keesing, John
Gagnon, Monique
Bessey, C.
Spilsbury, Francis
Irvine, T.R.
author_facet Wells, Fred
Keesing, John
Gagnon, Monique
Bessey, C.
Spilsbury, Francis
Irvine, T.R.
author_sort Wells, Fred
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Introduction: The west coast of Western Australia (WA) is a global hotspot for increasing sea surface temperatures and marine heatwaves. Methods: We used visual survey transects to compare mollusc and echinoderm populations on three coastal intertidal platform reefs on the Perth shoreline with two intertidal platforms at the west end of Rottnest Island (32°S) which are under the influence of the southward flowing Leeuwin Current. Results: In 1983, temperate species dominated Perth coastal molluscan diversity, but the tropical mussel Brachidontes sculptus dominated density. Species richness on coastal platforms remained constant in 2007 and 2021, but total densities were lower in 2007 as B. sculptus declined; partial recovery occurred on coastal platforms in 2021. Tropical species were a significant component of mollusc diversity and density at Rottnest Island in 1982 and 2007. Total mollusc density declined by 98% at the island sites of Radar Reef and 86% at Cape Vlamingh and total echinoderm density by 52% and 88% respectively from 2007 to 2021; species diversity also declined sharply. Discussion: Tropical species have moved southward in WA subtidal environments, but tropical, temperate and WA endemic species all suffered losses of biodiversity and catastrophic declines in density of 90% or more on the two Rottnest Island intertidal platforms. Data presented here provide a sound basis for exploring the possible causes of the catastrophic mortality at the west end of Rottnest Island and monitoring for recovery.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-936062023-11-15T04:01:12Z Responses of intertidal invertebrates to rising sea surface temperatures in the southeastern Indian Ocean Wells, Fred Keesing, John Gagnon, Monique Bessey, C. Spilsbury, Francis Irvine, T.R. Introduction: The west coast of Western Australia (WA) is a global hotspot for increasing sea surface temperatures and marine heatwaves. Methods: We used visual survey transects to compare mollusc and echinoderm populations on three coastal intertidal platform reefs on the Perth shoreline with two intertidal platforms at the west end of Rottnest Island (32°S) which are under the influence of the southward flowing Leeuwin Current. Results: In 1983, temperate species dominated Perth coastal molluscan diversity, but the tropical mussel Brachidontes sculptus dominated density. Species richness on coastal platforms remained constant in 2007 and 2021, but total densities were lower in 2007 as B. sculptus declined; partial recovery occurred on coastal platforms in 2021. Tropical species were a significant component of mollusc diversity and density at Rottnest Island in 1982 and 2007. Total mollusc density declined by 98% at the island sites of Radar Reef and 86% at Cape Vlamingh and total echinoderm density by 52% and 88% respectively from 2007 to 2021; species diversity also declined sharply. Discussion: Tropical species have moved southward in WA subtidal environments, but tropical, temperate and WA endemic species all suffered losses of biodiversity and catastrophic declines in density of 90% or more on the two Rottnest Island intertidal platforms. Data presented here provide a sound basis for exploring the possible causes of the catastrophic mortality at the west end of Rottnest Island and monitoring for recovery. 2023 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/93606 10.3389/fmars.2023.1075228 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ fulltext
spellingShingle Wells, Fred
Keesing, John
Gagnon, Monique
Bessey, C.
Spilsbury, Francis
Irvine, T.R.
Responses of intertidal invertebrates to rising sea surface temperatures in the southeastern Indian Ocean
title Responses of intertidal invertebrates to rising sea surface temperatures in the southeastern Indian Ocean
title_full Responses of intertidal invertebrates to rising sea surface temperatures in the southeastern Indian Ocean
title_fullStr Responses of intertidal invertebrates to rising sea surface temperatures in the southeastern Indian Ocean
title_full_unstemmed Responses of intertidal invertebrates to rising sea surface temperatures in the southeastern Indian Ocean
title_short Responses of intertidal invertebrates to rising sea surface temperatures in the southeastern Indian Ocean
title_sort responses of intertidal invertebrates to rising sea surface temperatures in the southeastern indian ocean
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/93606