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Inter-annual cascade effect on marine food web: A benthic pathway lagging nutrient supply to pelagic fish stock

Currently, spatial and temporal changes in nutrients availability, marine planktonic, and fish communities are best described on a shorter than inter-annual (seasonal) scale, primarily because the simultaneous year-to-year variations in physical, chemical, and biological parameters are very complex....

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Autores principales: Fernandes, Lohengrin Dias de Almeida, Fagundes Netto, Eduardo Barros, Coutinho, Ricardo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5590966/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28886162
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184512
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author Fernandes, Lohengrin Dias de Almeida
Fagundes Netto, Eduardo Barros
Coutinho, Ricardo
author_facet Fernandes, Lohengrin Dias de Almeida
Fagundes Netto, Eduardo Barros
Coutinho, Ricardo
author_sort Fernandes, Lohengrin Dias de Almeida
collection PubMed
description Currently, spatial and temporal changes in nutrients availability, marine planktonic, and fish communities are best described on a shorter than inter-annual (seasonal) scale, primarily because the simultaneous year-to-year variations in physical, chemical, and biological parameters are very complex. The limited availability of time series datasets furnishing simultaneous evaluations of temperature, nutrients, plankton, and fish have limited our ability to describe and to predict variability related to short-term process, as species-specific phenology and environmental seasonality. In the present study, we combine a computational time series analysis on a 15-year (1995–2009) weekly-sampled time series (high-resolution long-term time series, 780 weeks) with an Autoregressive Distributed Lag Model to track non-seasonal changes in 10 potentially related parameters: sea surface temperature, nutrient concentrations (NO(2), NO(3), NH(4) and PO(4)), phytoplankton biomass (as in situ chlorophyll a biomass), meroplankton (barnacle and mussel larvae), and fish abundance (Mugil liza and Caranx latus). Our data demonstrate for the first time that highly intense and frequent upwelling years initiate a huge energy flux that is not fully transmitted through classical size-structured food web by bottom-up stimulus but through additional ontogenetic steps. A delayed inter-annual sequential effect from phytoplankton up to top predators as carnivorous fishes is expected if most of energy is trapped into benthic filter feeding organisms and their larval forms. These sequential events can explain major changes in ecosystem food web that were not predicted in previous short-term models.
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spelling pubmed-55909662017-09-15 Inter-annual cascade effect on marine food web: A benthic pathway lagging nutrient supply to pelagic fish stock Fernandes, Lohengrin Dias de Almeida Fagundes Netto, Eduardo Barros Coutinho, Ricardo PLoS One Research Article Currently, spatial and temporal changes in nutrients availability, marine planktonic, and fish communities are best described on a shorter than inter-annual (seasonal) scale, primarily because the simultaneous year-to-year variations in physical, chemical, and biological parameters are very complex. The limited availability of time series datasets furnishing simultaneous evaluations of temperature, nutrients, plankton, and fish have limited our ability to describe and to predict variability related to short-term process, as species-specific phenology and environmental seasonality. In the present study, we combine a computational time series analysis on a 15-year (1995–2009) weekly-sampled time series (high-resolution long-term time series, 780 weeks) with an Autoregressive Distributed Lag Model to track non-seasonal changes in 10 potentially related parameters: sea surface temperature, nutrient concentrations (NO(2), NO(3), NH(4) and PO(4)), phytoplankton biomass (as in situ chlorophyll a biomass), meroplankton (barnacle and mussel larvae), and fish abundance (Mugil liza and Caranx latus). Our data demonstrate for the first time that highly intense and frequent upwelling years initiate a huge energy flux that is not fully transmitted through classical size-structured food web by bottom-up stimulus but through additional ontogenetic steps. A delayed inter-annual sequential effect from phytoplankton up to top predators as carnivorous fishes is expected if most of energy is trapped into benthic filter feeding organisms and their larval forms. These sequential events can explain major changes in ecosystem food web that were not predicted in previous short-term models. Public Library of Science 2017-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC5590966/ /pubmed/28886162 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184512 Text en © 2017 Fernandes et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fernandes, Lohengrin Dias de Almeida
Fagundes Netto, Eduardo Barros
Coutinho, Ricardo
Inter-annual cascade effect on marine food web: A benthic pathway lagging nutrient supply to pelagic fish stock
title Inter-annual cascade effect on marine food web: A benthic pathway lagging nutrient supply to pelagic fish stock
title_full Inter-annual cascade effect on marine food web: A benthic pathway lagging nutrient supply to pelagic fish stock
title_fullStr Inter-annual cascade effect on marine food web: A benthic pathway lagging nutrient supply to pelagic fish stock
title_full_unstemmed Inter-annual cascade effect on marine food web: A benthic pathway lagging nutrient supply to pelagic fish stock
title_short Inter-annual cascade effect on marine food web: A benthic pathway lagging nutrient supply to pelagic fish stock
title_sort inter-annual cascade effect on marine food web: a benthic pathway lagging nutrient supply to pelagic fish stock
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5590966/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28886162
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0184512
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