Climate change threatening underwater forests: Study
Climate change is affecting biodiversity on a global scale. In the marine realm, ocean warming and acidification are pushing dominant habitat-forming species into decline, affecting biodiversity. Predicted ocean warming and acidification can chang...

In humans, it has been observed that changes in the microbes in the gut can result in poor health, said researchers at the University of Sydney and the Sydney Institute of Marine Science in Australia.
A similar process happens in kelp. Predicted ocean warming and acidification can change microbes on the kelp surface, leading to disease and potentially putting fisheries at risk, they said.
Climate change is affecting biodiversity at a global scale. In the marine realm, ocean warming and acidification are pushing dominant habitat-forming species, such as corals and large seaweeds, into decline, affecting biodiversity.
The study, published in the journal Proceedings of The Royal Society B, shows these two processes can cause changes in the microbiome on the surface of large brown seaweed leading to disease-like symptoms.
This could impact kelp forests around the world, researchers said.
For example, it could contribute to further declines of the 8,000 kilometre long kelp forests that dominate the bottom half of Australia -- known as the Great Southern Reef -- potentially affecting all the associated ecosystems, including many species of fish, shellfish, lobster and abalone.
"If we lose the kelp forests, we also lose our two biggest fisheries," said Ziggy Marzinelli, lecturer at the University of Sydney.
"Our study shows the effects of climate change can be complex, driven by changes in tiny organisms -- microbes -- that cannot be seen," Marzinelli said.
The study has implications for the health and resilience of entire marine ecosystems, said Professor Peter Steinberg, director of Sydney Institute of Marine Science, who co-authored the study.
"The impact of losing the kelp forests would be the same as cutting down all the trees on the land. All the animals would be affected. It is the same in the oceans. If we lose the physical structure of the habitat, we lose the ecosystems," Steinberg said. PTI
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