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“Meso-Marine Ecosystems”: Management Units for the North Pacific? W. Sydeman 1, S. Batten 2, D. Hyrenbach 1, M. Henry 1, C. Rintoul 1, D. Welch 3, K. Morgan.

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Presentation on theme: "“Meso-Marine Ecosystems”: Management Units for the North Pacific? W. Sydeman 1, S. Batten 2, D. Hyrenbach 1, M. Henry 1, C. Rintoul 1, D. Welch 3, K. Morgan."— Presentation transcript:

1 “Meso-Marine Ecosystems”: Management Units for the North Pacific? W. Sydeman 1, S. Batten 2, D. Hyrenbach 1, M. Henry 1, C. Rintoul 1, D. Welch 3, K. Morgan 4 1 PRBO Conservation Science, Petaluma, CA, U.S.A. 2 SAHFOS, Plymouth, U.K. 3 Kintama Research, Nanaimo, B.C., Canada 4 Canadian Wildlife Service, Sidney, B.C., Canada

2 Macroecology as a Cornerstone for Ecosystem-based Management EBM requires identification of appropriate areas for management and human (stakeholder) involvement Large Marine Ecosystems (LMEs) have been suggested as appropriate for EBM, but may not reflect the extent of ecosystems (too large/too small? ecotones/edges?) or the scales of significant ecosystem and human interactions Therefore, macroecological investigations within and across LME on community structure, biodiversity, and scale-dependent ecological interactions (temporal and spatial) are required to define eco-regions for management

3 Hypothesis Top predator (marine bird) and plankton “communities” may be used to delineate North Pacific eco-regions Why? Indicators of habitats on multiple scales (water masses to “hotspots”, persistent and ephemeral ecosystem structures (e.g., fronts/eddies) Indicators of temporal environmental variability (e.g., ENSO, regime shifts, climate change), and effects on food webs

4 …a slight digression… The Atlantic Continuous Plankton Recorder (CPR) Project Long-term ocean ecosystem monitoring (initiated in ~1930 by SAHFOS) Marine ecology, climate change, fisheries management, biogeography, etc.

5 A CPR is a simple, rugged, mechanical device, towed behind merchant ships, that filters plankton from the seawater

6 Samples in North Atlantic database (to 2005); imagine the same thing for the North Pacific

7 Beaugrand et al. 2003 Nature 426, 661-664. Fisheries Forecasting Application, North Sea

8 The Pacific CPR Survey (2000 - ?) Both North – South and East – West Transects Batten, S.D., D.Welch and D. Mackas, PIs

9 The East – West Transect, 7500 km

10 Integrated Pacific CPR – Marine Bird and Mammal Survey ( E-W transect only)  Motivation: study upper- and lower trophic levels simultaneously  4+ years (June 02 – present)  12 integrated predator/plankton surveys (166 sea days; ~23,000 km, database available, NPRB)

11 Batten, S.D., et al. 2006. Characterising Meso-Marine Ecosystems (MME) in the North Pacific. Deep Sea Research II 53:270-290 1.plankton and seabird “ecoregions” match in space (spring 02) 2.plankton and seabird biomass positively correlated 3.ecoregions explained by physical environment 4.10 “MMEs” (potential management regions) identified June 2002

12 Question for today: Are plankton/seabird MMEs persistent between seasons and years?

13 Plankton: 5 years, Summer, P resence /Absence… Seabirds: 4 years, Spring-Summer-Fall ; Relative density of 23 “common” species Hierarchical Clustering Methods

14 Plankton, All Years ( dots replaced with lines ) NOTE: a cluster color from one year to the next does not represent a particular community – colors show eco-regions not specific “communities” between years 1 2 3 4/5 6 7/8/9? 10

15 Ben Saenz The Birds…

16 9 ecoregions 8 ecoregions

17 1.Season: little persistence in ecoregions 2.Yearly: moderate persistence; most ecoregions represented annually, with less variation in frequency 3.More variation across seasons than years Spring Bubble size proportional to frequency Seabird Community Structure Through Time

18 Summary and Conclusions (1) Plankton, seabird communities reveal persistent eco-regions in GOA, central Bering, greater heterogeneity in West coastal B.C., Gulf of Alaska “east”, Gulf of Alaska “west”) – 3 eco-regions (persistent) Unimak Pass Area – 1 or 2 ecoregions (ecotone) Central Bering Sea – 1 ecoregion (persistent) coastal Japan; Oyashio/western subarctic gyre and western Bering Sea - 2-4 ecoregions (not persistent) Why? Diversity? Greater response to climate? 7 – 10 eco-regions along this E-W transect (2) That being said, area boundaries unclear – continuum in community structure, messy (especially highly-mobile birds) (3) Integrated CPR Survey ideal for determining eco-regions and appropriate spatial units for management; however, future of survey is uncertain……


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