“…Besides habitat provision, brown algae are a key source of productivity along the coast (Mann, 1973;Pfister et al, 2019) and can significantly increase secondary productivity in nearshore ecosystems through direct herbivory and increased detrital production (Duggins et al, 1989;Krumhansl and Scheibling, 2012). This energy input plays an important role in maintaining food security for many large mammals (Estes et al, 2016;Pyenson and Vermeij, 2016;Vermeij et al, 2019), including humans, and is believed to have facilitated the spread of human populations from Asia to North America prior to the Holocene, the so-called "kelp highway" hypothesis (Erlandson et al, 2015;Braje et al, 2017). As humanity further ventures into the Anthropocene, brown algae are becoming key players in ocean-based strategies for combating climate change given their role in sequestering carbon (Krause-Jensen and Duarte 2016; Krause-Jensen et al, 2018;Hoegh-Guldberg et al, 2019).…”