Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T06:45:39.311Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The North Sea benthic system: a 36 year time-series

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 November 2008

C.L.J. Frid*
Affiliation:
School of Biological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Crown Street, Liverpool, L69 7ZB, UK
P.R Garwood
Affiliation:
IDENTICHAET, 8 Lesbury Road, Heaton, Newcastle upon Tyne NE6 5LB, UK
L.A. Robinson
Affiliation:
School of Biological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Crown Street, Liverpool, L69 7ZB, UK
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: C.L.J. Frid, School of Biological Sciences, University of Liverpool, Crown Street, Liverpool, L69 7ZB, UK email: [email protected]

Abstract

Since 1971 the macro-benthic infauna at Station P, 18.5 km off the Northumberland coast (central western North Sea), have been sampled by grabbing each January/February. The data series now includes over 260 taxa from 173 genera. The most abundant taxa are Heteromastus, Levinsinia and Priospio which between them account for nearly 45% of the individuals recorded while the top 10 ranked taxa between them include almost 70% of the individuals recorded. Both total abundance and genera richness have varied through the 36 year series, particularly during the late 1980s–early 1990s but there was no trend and values in the 2000s are similar to those at the start of the series. However, MDS ordination of the entire genera abundance series shows a trend in composition of the macrobenthos through time. There is evidence that the changes in composition were driven by fishing impacts, but also influenced by the trend in climate warming and altered fluxes of phytoplankton to the benthos. Given that the dominant taxa have not changed and the total abundance and richness are similar this implies a turnover and redistribution of individuals across many taxa and raises the possibility of shifts in the ecological functioning of the system.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2008

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Aebischer, N., Coulson, J. and Colebrook, J. (1990) Parallel long-term trends across four marine trophic levels and weather. Nature 347, 753755.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Attrill, M.J. and Power, M. (2002) Climatic influence on a marine fish assemblage. Nature 417, 275278.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beukema, J.J. (1992a) Expected changes in the Wadden Sea benthos in a warmer world: lessons from periods with milder winters. Netherlands Journal of Sea Research 30, 7379.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beukema, J.J. (1992b) Expected effects of changes in winter temperatures on benthic animals living in soft sediments in coastal North Sea areas. In Beukema, J.J., Wolff, W.J. and Brouns, J.W.M. (eds) Expected effects of climatic change of marine coastal ecosystems. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 8392.Google Scholar
Beukema, J.J., Essink, K. and Dekker, R. (2000) Long-term observations on the dynamics of three species of polychaetes living on tidal flats of the Wadden Sea: the role of weather and predator–prey interactions. Journal of Animal Ecology 69, 3144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bremner, J., Frid, C.L.J. and Rogers, S.I. (2003) Assessing marine ecosystem health: the long-term effects of fishing on functional biodiversity in North Sea benthos. Aquatic Ecosystem Health and Management 6, 131137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bremner, J., Frid, C.L.J. and Rogers, S.I. (2005) Biological traits of the North Sea benthos: does fishing affect benthic ecosystem function? American Fisheries Society Symposium 41, 477489.Google Scholar
Buchanan, J.B. (1993) Evidence of benthic pelagic coupling at a station off the Northumberland coast. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 172, 110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buchanan, J.B. and Moore, J.J. (1986a) A broad review of variability and persistence in the Northumberland benthic fauna—1971–1985. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 66, 641657.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buchanan, J.B. and Moore, J.J. (1986b) Long-term studies at a benthic station off the coast of Northumberland. Hydrobiologia 142, 121127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buchanan, J.B., Sheader, M. and Kingston, P.F. (1978) Sources of variability in the benthic macrofauna off the south Northumberland coast, 1971–1976. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 58, 191209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buchanan, J.B. and Warwick, R.M. (1974) An estimate of benthic macrofaunal production in the offshore mud of the Northumberland coast. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 54, 197222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, R.A. and Frid, C.L.J. (2001) Long-term changes in the North Sea ecosystem. Environmental Reviews 9, 131187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, R.A., Frid, C.L.J. and Nicholas, K.R. (2003) Long term, predation based control of a central-west North Sea zooplankton community. ICES Journal of Marine Science 60, 187197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colebrook, J. (1986) Environmental influences on long-term variability in marine plankton. Hydrobiologia 142, 309325.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dickson, R.R., Kelly, P.M., Colebrook, J.M., Wooster, W.S. and Cushing, D.H. (1988) North winds and production in the eastern North Atlantic. Journal of Plankton Research 10, 151169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dippner, J.W. and Ikauniece, A. (2001) Long-term zoobenthos variability in the Gulf of Riga in relation to climate variability. Journal of Marine Systems 30, 155164.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dippner, J.W., Kornilovs, G. and Sidrevics, L. (2000) Long-term variability of mesozooplankton in the Central Baltic Sea. Journal of Marine Systems 25, 2331.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dippner, J.W. and Kröncke, I. (2003) Forecast of climate-induced change in macrozoobenthos in the southern North Sea in spring. Climate Research 25, 179182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans, F. and Edwards, A.J. (1993) Changes in the zooplankton community off the coast of Northumberland between 1969 and 1988, with notes on changes in the phytoplankton and benthos. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 172, 1129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fransz, H.G., Colebrook, J.M., Gamble, J.C. and Krause, M. (1991) The zooplankton of the North Sea. Netherlands Journal of Sea Research 28, 152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frid, C.L.J., Buchanan, J.B. and Garwood, P.R. (1996) Variability and stability in benthos: twenty-two years of monitoring off Northumberland. ICES Journal of Marine Science 53, 978980.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frid, C.L.J., Clark, R.A. and Hall, J.A. (1999) Long-term changes in the benthos on a heavily fished ground off the NE coast of England. Marine Ecology Progress Series 188, 1320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frid, C.L.J. and Huliselan, N.V. (1996) Far-field control of long-term changes in Northumberland (NW North Sea) coastal zooplankton. ICES Journal of Marine Science 53, 972977.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frid, C.L.J. and Clark, R.A. (2000) Long-term changes in North Sea benthos: discerning the role of fisheries. In Kaiser, M.J. and deGroot, S.J. (eds) Effects of fishing on non-target species and habitats. London: Blackwell Science, pp. 198216.Google Scholar
Frid, C.L.J., Paramor, O.A.L. and Scott, C.L. (2005) Ecosystem-based fisheries management: progress in the NE Atlantic. Marine Policy 29, 461469.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frid, C.L.J., Paramor, O.A.L. and Scott, C.L. (2006) Ecosystem-based management of fisheries: is science limiting? ICES Journal of Marine Science 63, 822830.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fromentin, J.M. and Planque, B. (1996) Calanus and environment in the eastern North Atlantic. 2. Influence of the North Atlantic Oscillation on C. finmarchicus and C. helgolandicus. Marine Ecology Progress Series 134, 111118.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frost, M.T., Hardman-Mountford, N.J., Kennington, K., Frid, C.L.J., Griffiths, C., Joint, I. and Hawkins, S.J. (2005) Marine Environmental Change Network: Final Report. Plymouth: Report to DEFRA (Contract CDEP 84/5/311) from the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom.Google Scholar
Hurrell, J.W. (1995) Decadal trends in the North Atlantic Oscillation and relationships to regional temperature and precipitation. Science 269, 676679.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, P.D., Jónsson, T. and Wheeler, D. (1997) Extension to the North Atlantic Oscillation using early instrumental pressure observations from Gibraltar and South-West Iceland. International Journal Climatology 17, 14331450.3.0.CO;2-P>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kröncke, I. (1990) Macrofauna standing stock of the Dogger Bank—a comparison. 2. 1951–1952 versus 1985–1987. Are changes in the community of the northeastern part of the Dogger Bank due to environmental changes? Netherlands Journal of Sea Research 25, 189198.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kröncke, I. (1992) Macrofauna standing stock of the Dogger Bank—a Comparison. 3. 1950–1954 versus 1985–1987—a final summary. Helgoländer Meeresuntersuchungen 46, 137169.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kröncke, I., Dippner, J.W., Heyen, H. and Zeiss, B. (1998) Long-term changes in macrofaunal communities off Norderney (East Frisia, Germany) in relation to climate variability. Marine Ecology Progress Series 167, 2536.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lees, K., Pitois, S., Scott, C., Frid, C. and Mackinson, S. (2006) Characterizing regime shifts in the marine environment. Fish and Fisheries 7, 104127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Muren, U., Berglund, J., Samuelsson, K. and Andersson, A. (2005) Potential effects of elevated seawater temperature on pelagic food webs. Hydrobiologia 545, 153166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nicholas, K.R. and Frid, C.L.J. (1999) Occurrence of hydromedusae in the plankton off Northumberland (western central North Sea) and the role of planktonic predators. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 79, 979992.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Petersen, C.G.J. and Boysen-Jensen, P. (1911) Valuation of the sea. Animal life of the sea bottom, its food and quantity. Report of the Danish Biological Station 10, 176.Google Scholar
Reid, P.C., Borges, M.F. and Svendsen, E. (2001) A regime shift in the North Sea circa 1988 linked to changes in the North Sea horse mackerel fishery. Fisheries Research 50, 163171.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Robinson, L.A. (2004) The scientific basis for an ecosystem approach to managing benthic systems. PhD thesis. University of Newcastle.Google Scholar
Taylor, A.H. (1995) North–south shifts of the Gulf Stream and their climatic connection with the abundance of zooplankton in the UK and its surrounding seas. ICES Journal of Marine Science 52, 711721.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A.H. (1996) North–South shifts of the Gulf-Stream—ocean–atmosphere interactions in the North Atlantic. International Journal of Climatology 16, 559583.3.0.CO;2-Z>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A.H., Colebrook, J.M., Stephens, J.A. and Baker, N.G. (1992) Latitudinal displacements of the Gulf Stream and the abundance of plankton in the north-east Atlantic. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 72, 919921.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, A.H. and Stephens, J.A. (1980) Latitudinal displacements of the Gulf Stream (1966 to 1977) and their relation to changes in temperature and zooplankton abundance in the NE Atlantic. Oceanologia Acta 3, 145149.Google Scholar
Warwick, R.M., Ashman, C.M., Brown, A.R., Clarke, K.R., Dowell, B., Hart, B., Lewis, R.E., Shillabeer, N., Somerfield, P.J. and Tapp, J.F. (2002) Inter-annual changes in the biodiversity and community structure of the macrobenthos in Tees Bay and the Tees estuary, UK, associated with local and regional environmental events. Marine Ecology Progress Series 234, 113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zeiss, B. and Kröncke, I. (1997) Long-term macrofaunal studies in a subtidal habitat off Norderney (East Frisia, Germany) from 1978 to 1994. 1. The late winter samples. Oceanologica Acta 20, 311318.Google Scholar