Mesophotic thermal refuge modelling shows mitigated reductions in fisheries productivity during marine heatwaves

The oceans are warming, and marine heatwaves are increasing in frequency, extremity and duration. As ectotherms, fish that experience temperatures above their optimum suffer a host of physiological and demographic impacts, which result in a net negative effect on population biomass and productivity....

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Main Authors: Hiromi Beran, Samik Datta, Robert O. Smith, Lisa Woods, Monique Ladds, James J. Bell, Alice Rogers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Marine Science
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2025.1540055/full
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author Hiromi Beran
Samik Datta
Robert O. Smith
Lisa Woods
Monique Ladds
James J. Bell
Alice Rogers
author_facet Hiromi Beran
Samik Datta
Robert O. Smith
Lisa Woods
Monique Ladds
James J. Bell
Alice Rogers
author_sort Hiromi Beran
collection DOAJ
description The oceans are warming, and marine heatwaves are increasing in frequency, extremity and duration. As ectotherms, fish that experience temperatures above their optimum suffer a host of physiological and demographic impacts, which result in a net negative effect on population biomass and productivity. However, temperatures generally decline with depth, which means that mesophotic ecosystems, found in the ‘twilight zone’ between approximately 30 and 150 m depth, have the potential to act as thermal refuges. While pelagic fishes have flexibility to deepen their distributions in the open ocean, reef fishes are dependent on benthic habitats for structural complexity and food. Mesophotic reefs may therefore be of particular importance as thermal refuges in coastal ecosystems. By analysing 27 years of model-derived temperature-depth data, we found that the intensity, duration and frequency of marine heatwaves were buffered at mesophotic versus euphotic depths at Tawhiti Rahi (the Poor Knights Islands) in Aotearoa, New Zealand. To explore and quantify the importance of this mesophotic thermal refuge we parameterised a temperature-dependent multispecies size-spectrum model for the Poor Knights Islands reef community and ran marine heatwave simulations in the presence and absence of mesophotic reef habitat. Almost all heatwave strengths resulted in biomass and productivity reductions for almost all modelled fish species, but the presence of a mesophotic thermal refuge often reduced or reversed these losses. For the biomass of fish species targeted by fisheries, negative impacts were reversed during a moderate heatwave (28% average difference compared to scenarios lacking a refuge), negated during a strong heatwave (24% difference), and mitigated during severe and extreme heatwaves (21% and 20% respectively). The productivity of fisheries targets was similar with or without a thermal refuge under moderate heatwave conditions, but under strong, severe and extreme heatwaves, refuges became valuable. Average productivity losses were almost negated during strong heatwaves (5% difference), negated during severe heatwaves (17% difference), and mitigated during extreme heatwaves (19% difference). By providing this first estimate of the value of mesophotic reefs as thermal refuges during marine heatwaves we hope to inform conservation and management decisions about the targeted protection of mesophotic reefs.
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publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
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series Frontiers in Marine Science
spelling doaj-art-5cf02040e9d14ce4b8e4a2a74b8a4d822025-08-20T02:32:33ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Marine Science2296-77452025-06-011210.3389/fmars.2025.15400551540055Mesophotic thermal refuge modelling shows mitigated reductions in fisheries productivity during marine heatwavesHiromi Beran0Samik Datta1Robert O. Smith2Lisa Woods3Monique Ladds4James J. Bell5Alice Rogers6School of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington | Te Herenga Waka, Wellington, New ZealandPopulation Modelling Group, National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA), Wellington, New ZealandDepartment of Marine Science, University of Otago, Dunedin, New ZealandSchool of Mathematics and Statistics, Victoria University of Wellington | Te Herenga Waka, Wellington, New ZealandDepartment of Conservation, Wellington, New ZealandSchool of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington | Te Herenga Waka, Wellington, New ZealandSchool of Biological Sciences, Victoria University of Wellington | Te Herenga Waka, Wellington, New ZealandThe oceans are warming, and marine heatwaves are increasing in frequency, extremity and duration. As ectotherms, fish that experience temperatures above their optimum suffer a host of physiological and demographic impacts, which result in a net negative effect on population biomass and productivity. However, temperatures generally decline with depth, which means that mesophotic ecosystems, found in the ‘twilight zone’ between approximately 30 and 150 m depth, have the potential to act as thermal refuges. While pelagic fishes have flexibility to deepen their distributions in the open ocean, reef fishes are dependent on benthic habitats for structural complexity and food. Mesophotic reefs may therefore be of particular importance as thermal refuges in coastal ecosystems. By analysing 27 years of model-derived temperature-depth data, we found that the intensity, duration and frequency of marine heatwaves were buffered at mesophotic versus euphotic depths at Tawhiti Rahi (the Poor Knights Islands) in Aotearoa, New Zealand. To explore and quantify the importance of this mesophotic thermal refuge we parameterised a temperature-dependent multispecies size-spectrum model for the Poor Knights Islands reef community and ran marine heatwave simulations in the presence and absence of mesophotic reef habitat. Almost all heatwave strengths resulted in biomass and productivity reductions for almost all modelled fish species, but the presence of a mesophotic thermal refuge often reduced or reversed these losses. For the biomass of fish species targeted by fisheries, negative impacts were reversed during a moderate heatwave (28% average difference compared to scenarios lacking a refuge), negated during a strong heatwave (24% difference), and mitigated during severe and extreme heatwaves (21% and 20% respectively). The productivity of fisheries targets was similar with or without a thermal refuge under moderate heatwave conditions, but under strong, severe and extreme heatwaves, refuges became valuable. Average productivity losses were almost negated during strong heatwaves (5% difference), negated during severe heatwaves (17% difference), and mitigated during extreme heatwaves (19% difference). By providing this first estimate of the value of mesophotic reefs as thermal refuges during marine heatwaves we hope to inform conservation and management decisions about the targeted protection of mesophotic reefs.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2025.1540055/fullcoastal fisheriesmarine ecosystemsimulationmizerthermal refugemarine heatwave
spellingShingle Hiromi Beran
Samik Datta
Robert O. Smith
Lisa Woods
Monique Ladds
James J. Bell
Alice Rogers
Mesophotic thermal refuge modelling shows mitigated reductions in fisheries productivity during marine heatwaves
Frontiers in Marine Science
coastal fisheries
marine ecosystem
simulation
mizer
thermal refuge
marine heatwave
title Mesophotic thermal refuge modelling shows mitigated reductions in fisheries productivity during marine heatwaves
title_full Mesophotic thermal refuge modelling shows mitigated reductions in fisheries productivity during marine heatwaves
title_fullStr Mesophotic thermal refuge modelling shows mitigated reductions in fisheries productivity during marine heatwaves
title_full_unstemmed Mesophotic thermal refuge modelling shows mitigated reductions in fisheries productivity during marine heatwaves
title_short Mesophotic thermal refuge modelling shows mitigated reductions in fisheries productivity during marine heatwaves
title_sort mesophotic thermal refuge modelling shows mitigated reductions in fisheries productivity during marine heatwaves
topic coastal fisheries
marine ecosystem
simulation
mizer
thermal refuge
marine heatwave
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2025.1540055/full
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