The media report at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-19758440 indicates that increasing ocean temperatures may cause a reduction of the size of fish. This could have negative effects on populations which depend on fish for their protein intake.
The full scientific paper is freely downloadable at http://www.nature.com/nclimate/journ...imate1691.html
Guess the British traditional fish'n'chips will be more chips and less fish!
The scientists argue that failure to control greenhouse gas emissions will have a greater impact on marine ecosystems than previously thought.
Changes in temperature, oxygen content and other ocean biogeochemical properties directly affect the ecophysiology of marine water-breathing organisms[1, 2, 3]. Previous studies suggest that the most prominent biological responses are changes in distribution[4, 5, 6], phenology[7, 8] and productivity[9]. Both theory and empirical observations also support the hypothesis that warming and reduced oxygen will reduce body size of marine fishes[10, 11, 12]. However, the extent to which such changes would exacerbate the impacts of climate and ocean changes on global marine ecosystems remains unexplored.