The importance of within-system spatial variation in drivers of marine ecosystem regime shifts

Author:

Fisher J. A. D.1,Casini M.2,Frank K. T.3,Möllmann C.4,Leggett W. C.5,Daskalov G.6

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Fisheries Ecosystems Research, Fisheries and Marine Institute of Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada A1C 5R3

2. Department of Aquatic Resources, Institute of Marine Research, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Lysekil 54330, Sweden

3. Ocean Sciences Division, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada B2Y 4A2

4. Institute of Hydrobiology and Fisheries Sciences, University of Hamburg, Hamburg 22767, Germany

5. Department of Biology, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 3N6

6. Department of Aquatic Ecosystems, Institute of Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, Sofia 1113, Bulgaria

Abstract

Comparative analyses of the dynamics of exploited marine ecosystems have led to differing hypotheses regarding the primary causes of observed regime shifts, while many ecosystems have apparently not undergone regime shifts. These varied responses may be partly explained by the decade-old recognition that within-system spatial heterogeneity in key climate and anthropogenic drivers may be important, as recent theoretical examinations have concluded that spatial heterogeneity in environmental characteristics may diminish the tendency for regime shifts. Here, we synthesize recent, empirical within-system spatio-temporal analyses of some temperate and subarctic large marine ecosystems in which regime shifts have (and have not) occurred. Examples from the Baltic Sea, Black Sea, Bengula Current, North Sea, Barents Sea and Eastern Scotian Shelf reveal the largely neglected importance of considering spatial variability in key biotic and abiotic influences and species movements in the context of evaluating and predicting regime shifts. We highlight both the importance of understanding the scale-dependent spatial dynamics of climate influences and key predator–prey interactions to unravel the dynamics of regime shifts, and the utility of spatial downscaling of proposed mechanisms (as evident in the North Sea and Barents Sea) as a means of evaluating hypotheses originally derived from among-system comparisons.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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