Combined Fishing and Climate Forcing in the Southern Benguela Upwelling Ecosystem: An End-to-End Modelling Approach Reveals Dampened Effects
Authored by Yunne-Jai Shin, Morgane Travers-Trolet, Lynne J Shannon, Coleen L Moloney, John G Field
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0094286
Sponsors:
European Union
French Foundation for Research on Biodiversity (FRB)
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Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
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Abstract
The effects of climate and fishing on marine ecosystems have usually
been studied separately, but their interactions make ecosystem dynamics
difficult to understand and predict. Of particular interest to
management, the potential synergism or antagonism between fishing
pressure and climate forcing is analysed in this paper, using an
end-to-end ecosystem model of the southern Benguela ecosystem, built
from coupling hydrodynamic, biogeochemical and multispecies fish models
(ROMS-N(2)P(2)Z(2)D(2)-OSMOSE). Scenarios of different intensities of
upwelling-favourable wind stress combined with scenarios of fishing
top-predator fish were tested. Analyses of isolated drivers show that
the bottom-up effect of the climate forcing propagates up the food chain
whereas the top-down effect of fishing cascades down to zooplankton in
unfavourable environmental conditions but dampens before it reaches
phytoplankton. When considering both climate and fishing drivers
together, it appears that top-down control dominates the link between
top-predator fish and forage fish, whereas interactions between the
lower trophic levels are dominated by bottom-up control. The forage fish
functional group appears to be a central component of this ecosystem, being the meeting point of two opposite trophic controls. The set of
combined scenarios shows that fishing pressure and upwelling-favourable
wind stress have mostly dampened effects on fish populations, compared
to predictions from the separate effects of the stressors. Dampened
effects result in biomass accumulation at the top predator fish level
but a depletion of biomass at the forage fish level. This should draw
our attention to the evolution of this functional group, which appears
as both structurally important in the trophic functioning of the
ecosystem, and very sensitive to climate and fishing pressures. In
particular, diagnoses considering fishing pressure only might be more
optimistic than those that consider combined effects of fishing and
environmental variability.
Tags
Individual-based model
Biodiversity
systems
fisheries
Impacts
Bottom-up
Responses
Trophic interactions
Marine ecosystems
Multiple stressors