Cascading effects of mass mortality events in Arctic marine communities.

Glob Chang Biol

Centre for Ecological and Evolutionary Synthesis (CEES), Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, PO Box 1066 Blindern, N-0316, Oslo, Norway.

Published: January 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mass mortality events, caused by factors like extreme weather or toxic spills, can drastically reduce populations rapidly and their frequency is expected to rise globally.
  • The study combines a multispecies model with a Bayesian approach to evaluate how these events affect ecological communities, focusing on a case in the Barents Sea involving fish and zooplankton.
  • The findings emphasize the need to consider uncertainty and precaution when assessing the impact of such events, offering a framework that could be useful for analyzing potential ecological damage from human activities, particularly in sensitive areas like the Arctic.

Article Abstract

Mass mortality events caused by pulse anthropogenic or environmental perturbations (e.g., extreme weather, toxic spills or epizootics) severely reduce the abundance of a population in a short time. The frequency and impact of these events are likely to increase across the globe. Studies on how such events may affect ecological communities of interacting species are scarce. By combining a multispecies Gompertz model with a Bayesian state-space framework, we quantify community-level effects of a mass mortality event in a single species. We present a case study on a community of fish and zooplankton in the Barents Sea to illustrate how a mass mortality event of different intensities affecting the lower trophic level (krill) may propagate to higher trophic levels (capelin and cod). This approach is especially valuable for assessing community-level effects of potential anthropogenic-driven mass mortality events, owing to the ability to account for uncertainty in the assessed impact due to uncertainty about the ecological dynamics. We hence quantify how the assessed impact of a mass mortality event depends on the degree of precaution considered. We suggest that this approach can be useful for assessing the possible detrimental outcomes of toxic spills, for example oil spills, in relatively simple communities such as often found in the Arctic, a region under increasing influence of human activities due to increased land and sea use.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13344DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mass mortality
24
mortality events
12
mortality event
12
effects mass
8
toxic spills
8
community-level effects
8
assessed impact
8
mass
6
mortality
6
events
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!