A Historical Plankton Index: Zooplankton abundance in the North Sea since 800 CE

Cordula Scherer, Francis Ludlow, Al Matthews, Patrick Hayes, Riina Klais, Poul Holm
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Abstract

The North Sea region boasted one of the world’s most important fisheries for many centuries. Climate directly and indirectly influences the development and survival of many important pelagic fish in the North Sea ecosystem. One indirect influence is the food availability in the form of phyto- and zooplankton abundance, which is strongly controlled by environmental factors. One of these environmental factors is local sea surface temperatures. A negative correlation between zooplankton abundance and sea surface temperature is well established for the epeiric sea on the European continental shelf. Continuous temporal observations of North Sea zooplankton production only exist since 1958. Therefore we developed a Historical Plankton Index (HPI) from 800 CE onwards to extend our record of temperature-driven zooplankton abundance in the North Sea over a multi-centennial time scale. For this we used the North Atlantic temperature reconstructions and associations between zooplankton abundance and contemporary sea surface temperatures established applying a General Additive Modelling (GAM) approach. We then examined the association between the HPI and historical landings from the Dutch commercial herring fishery in the 17th century to test the utility of our HPI. We examine the potential influence of food availability (in terms of zooplankton abundance) on the fishery, the evolution of which is often only considered in terms of human influences such as conflict, fishing gear and demand for fish as a commodity. We find that under certain conditions the HPI can explain 20% of the variability in Dutch herring landings. This highlights the importance of developing long-term and large-scale indices of natural marine ecosystem dynamics to understand the historical fortunes of the commercial fishing industry. The results are directly relevant to the United Nations’ sustainable development goal 14 – life below water.
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浮游生物历史指数:公元 800 年以来北海的浮游动物丰度
几个世纪以来,北海地区一直是世界上最重要的渔场之一。气候直接或间接地影响着北海生态系统中许多重要中上层鱼类的发展和生存。其中一个间接影响因素是以浮游植物和浮游动物丰度为形式的食物供应量,这在很大程度上受环境因素的控制。其中一个环境因素是当地海面温度。浮游动物的丰度与海面温度之间的负相关关系在欧洲大陆架的太平洋海域已经得到证实。对北海浮游动物产量的连续时间观测仅始于 1958 年。因此,我们开发了从公元 800 年起的历史浮游生物指数(HPI),以将我们对温度驱动的北海浮游动物丰度的记录扩展到多世纪的时间尺度。为此,我们使用了北大西洋温度重建以及应用通用加法建模(GAM)方法建立的浮游动物丰度与当代海表温度之间的关联。然后,我们研究了 HPI 与 17 世纪荷兰商业鲱鱼捕捞历史上岸量之间的关联,以检验 HPI 的实用性。我们研究了食物供应(浮游动物丰度)对渔业的潜在影响,其演变通常只考虑人为影响,如冲突、渔具和对鱼类作为商品的需求。我们发现,在某些条件下,HPI 可以解释荷兰鲱鱼上岸量 20% 的变化。这凸显了开发长期、大规模的自然海洋生态系统动态指数对了解商业捕鱼业历史命运的重要性。这些结果与联合国可持续发展目标 14--水下生命直接相关。
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