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Return of warm conditions in the southeastern Bering Sea: Phytoplankton - Fish

In 2014, the Bering Sea shifted back to warmer ocean temperatures (+2 (o)C above average), bringing concern for the potential for a new warm stanza and broad biological and ecological cascading effects. In 2015 and 2016 dedicated surveys were executed to study the progression of ocean heating and ec...

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Autores principales: Duffy-Anderson, Janet T., Stabeno, Phyllis J., Siddon, Elizabeth C., Andrews, Alex G., Cooper, Daniel W., Eisner, Lisa B., Farley, Edward V., Harpold, Colleen E., Heintz, Ron A., Kimmel, David G., Sewall, Fletcher F., Spear, Adam H., Yasumishii, Ellen C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5489148/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28658253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178955
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author Duffy-Anderson, Janet T.
Stabeno, Phyllis J.
Siddon, Elizabeth C.
Andrews, Alex G.
Cooper, Daniel W.
Eisner, Lisa B.
Farley, Edward V.
Harpold, Colleen E.
Heintz, Ron A.
Kimmel, David G.
Sewall, Fletcher F.
Spear, Adam H.
Yasumishii, Ellen C.
author_facet Duffy-Anderson, Janet T.
Stabeno, Phyllis J.
Siddon, Elizabeth C.
Andrews, Alex G.
Cooper, Daniel W.
Eisner, Lisa B.
Farley, Edward V.
Harpold, Colleen E.
Heintz, Ron A.
Kimmel, David G.
Sewall, Fletcher F.
Spear, Adam H.
Yasumishii, Ellen C.
author_sort Duffy-Anderson, Janet T.
collection PubMed
description In 2014, the Bering Sea shifted back to warmer ocean temperatures (+2 (o)C above average), bringing concern for the potential for a new warm stanza and broad biological and ecological cascading effects. In 2015 and 2016 dedicated surveys were executed to study the progression of ocean heating and ecosystem response. We describe ecosystem response to multiple, consecutive years of ocean warming and offer perspective on the broader impacts. Ecosystem changes observed include reduced spring phytoplankton biomass over the southeast Bering Sea shelf relative to the north, lower abundances of large-bodied crustacean zooplankton taxa, and degraded feeding and body condition of age-0 walleye pollock. This suggests poor ecosystem conditions for young pollock production and the risk of significant decline in the number of pollock available to the pollock fishery in 2–3 years. However, we also noted that high quality prey, large copepods and euphausiids, and lower temperatures in the north may have provided a refuge from poor conditions over the southern shelf, potentially buffering the impact of a sequential-year warm stanza on the Bering Sea pollock population. We offer the hypothesis that juvenile (age-0, age-1) pollock may buffer deleterious warm stanza effects by either utilizing high productivity waters associated with the strong, northerly Cold Pool, as a refuge from the warm, low production areas of the southern shelf, or by exploiting alternative prey over the southern shelf. We show that in 2015, the ocean waters influenced by spring sea ice (the Cold Pool) supported robust phytoplankton biomass (spring) comprised of centric diatom chains, a crustacean copepod community comprised of large-bodied taxa (spring, summer), and a large aggregation of midwater fishes, potentially young pollock. In this manner, the Cold Pool may have acted as a trophic refuge in that year. The few age-0 pollock occurring over the southeast shelf consumed high numbers of euphausiids which may have provided a high quality alternate prey. In 2016 a retracted Cold Pool precluded significant refuging in the north, though pollock foraging on available euphausiids over the southern shelf may have mitigated the effect of warm waters and reduced large availability of large copepods. This work presents the hypothesis that, in the short term, juvenile pollock can mitigate the drastic impacts of sustained warming. This short-term buffering, combined with recent observations (2017) of renewed sea ice presence over southeast Bering Sea shelf and a potential return to average or at least cooler ecosystem conditions, suggests that recent warm year stanza (2014–2016) effects to the pollock population and fishery may be mitigated.
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spelling pubmed-54891482017-07-11 Return of warm conditions in the southeastern Bering Sea: Phytoplankton - Fish Duffy-Anderson, Janet T. Stabeno, Phyllis J. Siddon, Elizabeth C. Andrews, Alex G. Cooper, Daniel W. Eisner, Lisa B. Farley, Edward V. Harpold, Colleen E. Heintz, Ron A. Kimmel, David G. Sewall, Fletcher F. Spear, Adam H. Yasumishii, Ellen C. PLoS One Research Article In 2014, the Bering Sea shifted back to warmer ocean temperatures (+2 (o)C above average), bringing concern for the potential for a new warm stanza and broad biological and ecological cascading effects. In 2015 and 2016 dedicated surveys were executed to study the progression of ocean heating and ecosystem response. We describe ecosystem response to multiple, consecutive years of ocean warming and offer perspective on the broader impacts. Ecosystem changes observed include reduced spring phytoplankton biomass over the southeast Bering Sea shelf relative to the north, lower abundances of large-bodied crustacean zooplankton taxa, and degraded feeding and body condition of age-0 walleye pollock. This suggests poor ecosystem conditions for young pollock production and the risk of significant decline in the number of pollock available to the pollock fishery in 2–3 years. However, we also noted that high quality prey, large copepods and euphausiids, and lower temperatures in the north may have provided a refuge from poor conditions over the southern shelf, potentially buffering the impact of a sequential-year warm stanza on the Bering Sea pollock population. We offer the hypothesis that juvenile (age-0, age-1) pollock may buffer deleterious warm stanza effects by either utilizing high productivity waters associated with the strong, northerly Cold Pool, as a refuge from the warm, low production areas of the southern shelf, or by exploiting alternative prey over the southern shelf. We show that in 2015, the ocean waters influenced by spring sea ice (the Cold Pool) supported robust phytoplankton biomass (spring) comprised of centric diatom chains, a crustacean copepod community comprised of large-bodied taxa (spring, summer), and a large aggregation of midwater fishes, potentially young pollock. In this manner, the Cold Pool may have acted as a trophic refuge in that year. The few age-0 pollock occurring over the southeast shelf consumed high numbers of euphausiids which may have provided a high quality alternate prey. In 2016 a retracted Cold Pool precluded significant refuging in the north, though pollock foraging on available euphausiids over the southern shelf may have mitigated the effect of warm waters and reduced large availability of large copepods. This work presents the hypothesis that, in the short term, juvenile pollock can mitigate the drastic impacts of sustained warming. This short-term buffering, combined with recent observations (2017) of renewed sea ice presence over southeast Bering Sea shelf and a potential return to average or at least cooler ecosystem conditions, suggests that recent warm year stanza (2014–2016) effects to the pollock population and fishery may be mitigated. Public Library of Science 2017-06-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5489148/ /pubmed/28658253 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178955 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open access article, free of all copyright, and may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose. The work is made available under the Creative Commons CC0 (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) public domain dedication.
spellingShingle Research Article
Duffy-Anderson, Janet T.
Stabeno, Phyllis J.
Siddon, Elizabeth C.
Andrews, Alex G.
Cooper, Daniel W.
Eisner, Lisa B.
Farley, Edward V.
Harpold, Colleen E.
Heintz, Ron A.
Kimmel, David G.
Sewall, Fletcher F.
Spear, Adam H.
Yasumishii, Ellen C.
Return of warm conditions in the southeastern Bering Sea: Phytoplankton - Fish
title Return of warm conditions in the southeastern Bering Sea: Phytoplankton - Fish
title_full Return of warm conditions in the southeastern Bering Sea: Phytoplankton - Fish
title_fullStr Return of warm conditions in the southeastern Bering Sea: Phytoplankton - Fish
title_full_unstemmed Return of warm conditions in the southeastern Bering Sea: Phytoplankton - Fish
title_short Return of warm conditions in the southeastern Bering Sea: Phytoplankton - Fish
title_sort return of warm conditions in the southeastern bering sea: phytoplankton - fish
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5489148/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28658253
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178955
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