A trait-based assessment of the Barents Sea fish community: implications for vulnerability under environmental change
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/6384View/ Open
Thesis introduction (PDF)
Wiedmann MA, Aschan M, Certain G, Dolgov A, Greenacre M, Johannesen E, Planque B, Primicerio R.: 'Functional diversity of the Barents Sea fish community', Marine Ecology Progress Series (2014), vol. 495:205-218. Also available at =http://dx.doi.org/10.3354/meps10558 (PDF)
Date
2014-06-06Type
Doctoral thesisDoktorgradsavhandling
Author
Wiedmann, Magnus AuneAbstract
SUMMARY
This is a study of the fish community in the Barents Sea and its vulnerability to
disturbance such as fishing and climate change. The vulnerability of the fish community
depends on its sensitivity to, and adaptability under, stress. To assess these two components
of vulnerability, I have combined survey data from the Barents Sea with information about
the species properties (i.e., traits), following three approaches. 1) To study the adaptability
under disturbance, I have focused on functional diversity, which is a measure of the
interspecies functional dissimilarities. 2) To study the sensitivity of the fish community
functioning to the loss of species, I have assessed functional redundancy. 3) I have assessed
the sensitivity of single species to fishing. For all these three measures, I have mapped the
spatial variation throughout the Barents Sea. I have chosen to focus on the time period 2004-
2009, a period that was characterized by heating water masses and declining sea ice coverage
in the Barents Sea.
The analyses indicate that the fish community has a relatively low vulnerability in the
central and south-western parts of the Barents Sea. However, many of the species found there
are also fishery-sensitive. Further to the north and east, the community vulnerability appears
to be higher due to lower functional diversity and redundancy. The analyses also show that
fish that traditionally are found further south moved northwards. This is interpreted as a sign
of borealization, which likely occurred due to a heating of the water masses. This pattern is
particularly eminent in the northern and north-eastern parts of the Barents Sea, where
commercially attractive species establish that are also sensitive to fishing. Since the
ecosystem in these northern areas can be vulnerable, and since it is very little studied,
cautiousness is required. Future studies that focus on the species’ life histories and functional
roles will enhance our understanding of the ecosystem vulnerability.
Description
Papers 2 and 3 of this thesis are not available in Munin:
2. Wiedmann MA, Aschan M, Greenacre M, Dolgov A, Primicerio R.: 'Functional redundancy in Barents Sea fish: ecological implications of environmental change' (manuscript).
3. Wiedmann MA, Primicerio R, Dolgov A, Ottesen CAM, Aschan M.: 'Life history variation in Barents Sea fish: implications for sensitivity to fishing in a changing environment' (manuscript).
2. Wiedmann MA, Aschan M, Greenacre M, Dolgov A, Primicerio R.: 'Functional redundancy in Barents Sea fish: ecological implications of environmental change' (manuscript).
3. Wiedmann MA, Primicerio R, Dolgov A, Ottesen CAM, Aschan M.: 'Life history variation in Barents Sea fish: implications for sensitivity to fishing in a changing environment' (manuscript).
Publisher
UiT The Arctic University of NorwayUiT Norges arktiske universitet
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
Copyright 2014 The Author(s)
The following license file are associated with this item: