20-Paper Study Predicts Regional Extinctions, Major Shifts In Southern Ocean Food Web
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The team travelled on three cruises on the RRS James Clark Ross over three years and at different times of the year to account for seasonality. They applied a wide range of techniques to study the food web from net sampling to hydro-acoustics and compared results with records from the Discovery Investigations over 80 years ago.
Lead researcher from BAS Dr Geraint Tarling says, The Scotia Sea has some of the highest levels of productivity in the Southern Ocean. With impacts like ocean temperature change and krill fishing taking place its essential we understand exactly who eats who.
Key findings from the work included recordings around South Georgia of some of the strongest absorption levels of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere into the ocean yet seen in the Southern Ocean. The team also saw that both short and long food chains existed in different regions of the Scotia Sea the Discovery Investigations mainly recorded an abundance of short food chains.
Tarling continues, Our research shows there is likely to be regional extinctions of some species and the introduction of others so there will be winners and losers. This will have implications for the management of the Southern Ocean ecosystem in the face of the joint pressures of environmental change and the commercial harvesting of key species such as Antarctic krill.
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http://www.antarctica.ac.uk/about_bas/news/news_story.php?id=1718