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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Impacts of trawling disturbance on the trophic structure of benthic invertebrate communities

TLDR
The trophic structure of intensively trawled benthic invertebrate communities may be a robust feature of this marine ecosystem, thus ensuring the efficient processing of production within those animals that have sufficiently high intrinsic rates of population increase to withstand the levels of mortality imposed by trawling.
Abstract
Bottom trawling causes chronic and widespread disturbance to the seabed in shallow shelf seas and could lead to changes in the trophic structure and function of benthic communities, with important implications for the processing of primary production and the wider functioning of the marine ecosystem. We studied the effects of bottom trawling on the trophic structure of infaunal and epifaunal benthic communities in 2 regions (Silver Pit and Hills) of the central North Sea. Within each region, we quantified long-term (over 5 yr) differences in trawling disturbance at a series of sites (using sightings data from fishery protection flights), and related this to differences in the biomass and trophic structure of the benthic community. There were 27- and 10-fold differences in levels of beam trawl disturbance among the Silver Pit and Hills sites respectively, and we estimated that the frequency with which the entire area of the sites was trawled ranged from 0.2 to 6.5 times yr -1 in the Silver Pit and 0.2 to 2.3 times yr -1 in the Hills. The impacts of fishing were most pronounced in the Sil- ver Pit region, where the range of trawling disturbance was greater. Infaunal and epifaunal biomass decreased significantly with trawling disturbance. Within the infauna, there were highly significant decreases in the biomass of bivalves and spatangoids (burrowing sea-urchins) but no significant change in polychaetes. Relationships between trophic level (estimated using nitrogen stable isotope composition, δ 15 N) and body mass (as log2 size classes) were rarely significant, implying that the larger individuals in this community did not consistently prey on the smaller ones. For epifauna, the relationships were significant, but the slopes or intercepts of the fitted linear regressions were not significantly related to trawling disturbance. Moreover, mean δ 15 N of the sampled infaunal and epi- faunal communities were remarkably consistent across sites and not significantly related to trawling disturbance. Our results suggest that chronic trawling disturbance led to dramatic reductions in the biomass of infauna and epifauna, but these reductions were not reflected in changes to the mean trophic level of the community, or the relationships between the trophic levels of different sizes of epifauna. The trophic structure of intensively trawled benthic invertebrate communities may be a robust feature of this marine ecosystem, thus ensuring the efficient processing of production within those animals that have sufficiently high intrinsic rates of population increase to withstand the levels of mortality imposed by trawling.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Extinction vulnerability in marine populations

TL;DR: There is an urgent need for improved methods of detecting marine extinctions at various spatial scales, and for predicting the vulnerability of species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disturbance to Marine Benthic Habitats by Trawling and Dredging: Implications for Marine Biodiversity

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of marine habitat disturbance by commercial fishing have been well documented and the potential ramifications to the ecological function of seafloor communities and ecosystems have yet to be considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Global analysis of response and recovery of benthic biota to fishing

TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis of 101 different bottom-fishing gear impacts on the seabed and its biota was carried out and the direct effects of different types of fishing gear were strongly habitat-specific, with the most severe impact occurring in biogenic habitats in response to scallop-dredging.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bioturbators enhance ecosystem function through complex biogeochemical interactions

TL;DR: Experimental field measurements demonstrate how the abundance of spatangoid urchins—infaunal (in seafloor sediment) grazers / deposit feeders—is positively related to primary production, as their activities change nutrient fluxes and improve conditions for production by microphytobenthos (sedimentatry microbes and unicellular algae).
Journal ArticleDOI

A fuzzy logic expert system to estimate intrinsic extinction vulnerabilities of marine fishes to fishing

TL;DR: This fuzzy expert system provides vulnerability estimates that correlate with observed declines more closely than previous methods, and has advantages in flexibility of input data requirements, in the explicit representation of uncertainty, and in the ease of incorporating new knowledge.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Stable isotopes in ecosystem studies

TL;DR: The use of stable isotopes to solve biogeochemical problems in ecosystem analysis is increasing rapidly because stable isotope data can contribute both source-sink (tracer) and process information: the elements C, N, S, H, and all have more than one isotope, and isotopic compositions of natural materials can be measured with great precision with a mass spectrometer as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fishing Down Marine Food Webs

TL;DR: The mean trophic level of the species groups reported in Food and Agricultural Organization global fisheries statistics declined from 1950 to 1994, and results indicate that present exploitation patterns are unsustainable.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stepwise enrichment of 15N along food chains: Further evidence and the relation between δ15N and animal age

TL;DR: The isotopic composition of nitrogen was measured in marine and fresh-water animals from the East China Sea, The Bering Sea, Lake Ashinoko and Usujiri intertidal zone as mentioned in this paper.
Book ChapterDOI

δ13C Measurements as Indicators of Carbon Flow in Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems

B. Fry, +1 more
TL;DR: Stable isotope ratios provide clues about the origins and transformations of organic matter and have been used as a tool for understanding complex ecological processes as mentioned in this paper, which has prompted increasing use of stable isotope analyses as a method to understand complex biological processes.
Book ChapterDOI

The effects of fishing on marine ecosystems

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of fishing on benthic fauna, habitat, diversity, community structure and trophic interactions in tropical, temperate and polar marine environments and consider whether it is possible to predict or manage fishing-induced changes in marine ecosystems.
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