Lower trophic levels and detrital biomass control the Bay of Biscay continental shelf food web: Implications for ecosystem management

The Bay of Biscay (North-East Atlantic) has long been subjected to intense direct and indirect human activities that lead to the excessive degradation and sometimes overexploitation of natural resources. Fisheries management is gradually moving away from single-species assessments to more holistic,...

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Main Authors: Lassalle, G., Lobry, J., Le Loc'h, F., Bustamante, P., Certain, G., Delmas, D., Dupuy, C., Hily, C., Labry, C., Le Pape, O., Marquis, E., Petitgas, P., Pusineri, C., Ridoux, V., Spitz, J., Niquil, N.
Other Authors: CNRS UNIVERSITE DE LA ROCHELLE UMR 6250 FRA, CEMAGREF BORDEAUX UR EPBX FRA, IRD IFREMER CNRS UNIVERSITE DE MONTPELLIER 2 UMR 212 SETE FRA, IFREMER PLOUZANE FRA, CNRS UNIVERSITE OCCIDENTALE DE BRETAGNE UMR 6539 PLOUZANE FRA, UNIVERSITE EUROPEENNE DE BRETAGNE INRA AGROCAMPUS OUEST UMR 985 RENNES FRA
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://irsteadoc.irstea.fr/cemoa/PUB00034672
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spelling ftcemoa:oai:irsteadoc.irstea.fr:PUB00034672 2023-05-15T17:38:37+02:00 Lower trophic levels and detrital biomass control the Bay of Biscay continental shelf food web: Implications for ecosystem management Lassalle, G. Lobry, J. Le Loc'h, F. Bustamante, P. Certain, G. Delmas, D. Dupuy, C. Hily, C. Labry, C. Le Pape, O. Marquis, E. Petitgas, P. Pusineri, C. Ridoux, V. Spitz, J. Niquil, N. CNRS UNIVERSITE DE LA ROCHELLE UMR 6250 FRA CEMAGREF BORDEAUX UR EPBX FRA IRD IFREMER CNRS UNIVERSITE DE MONTPELLIER 2 UMR 212 SETE FRA IFREMER PLOUZANE FRA CNRS UNIVERSITE OCCIDENTALE DE BRETAGNE UMR 6539 PLOUZANE FRA UNIVERSITE EUROPEENNE DE BRETAGNE INRA AGROCAMPUS OUEST UMR 985 RENNES FRA BISCAYE BAIE 2011 application/pdf https://irsteadoc.irstea.fr/cemoa/PUB00034672 Anglais eng https://irsteadoc.irstea.fr/cemoa/PUB00034672 Date de dépôt: 2011-12-06 - Tous les documents et informations contenus dans la base CemOA Publications sont protégés en vertu du droit de propriété intellectuelle, en particulier par le droit d'auteur. La personne consultant la base CemOA Publications peut visualiser, reproduire, ou stocker des copies des publications, à condition que l'information soit seulement pour son usage personnel et non commercial. L'utilisation des travaux universitaires est soumise à autorisation préalable de leurs auteurs. Toute information relative au signalement d'une publication contenue dans CemOA Publications doit inclure la citation bibliographique usuelle : Nom du ou des auteurs, titre et source du document, date et URL de la notice (dc_identifier). 28710 BIOMASSE ECOSYSTEME MODELISATION BIOMASS ECOSYSTEMS MODELLING Article de revue scientifique à comité de lecture 2011 ftcemoa 2021-06-29T10:00:28Z The Bay of Biscay (North-East Atlantic) has long been subjected to intense direct and indirect human activities that lead to the excessive degradation and sometimes overexploitation of natural resources. Fisheries management is gradually moving away from single-species assessments to more holistic, multi-species approaches that better respond to the reality of ecosystem processes. Quantitative modelling methods such as Ecopath with Ecosim can be useful tools for planning, implementing and evaluating ecosystem-based fisheries management strategies. The aim of this study was therefore to model the energy fluxes within the food web of this highly pressured ecosystem and to extract practical information required in the diagnosis of ecosystem state/health. A well-described model comprising 30 living and two non-living compartments was successfully constructed with data of local origin, for the Bay of Biscay continental shelf. The same level of aggregation was applied to primary producers, mid-trophic-levels and top-predators boxes. The model was even more general as it encompassed the entire continuum of marine habitats, from benthic to pelagic domains. Output values for most ecosystem attributes indicated a relatively mature and stable ecosystem, with a large proportion of its energy flow originating from detritus. Ecological network analysis also provided evidence that bottom-up processes play a significant role in the population dynamics of upper-trophic-levels and in the global structuring of this marine ecosystem. Finally, a novel metric based on ecosystem production depicted an ecosystem not far from being overexploited. This finding being not entirely consistent over indicators, further analyses based on dynamic simulations are required. Article in Journal/Newspaper North East Atlantic Irstea Publications et Bases documentaires (Irstea@doc/CemOA)
institution Open Polar
collection Irstea Publications et Bases documentaires (Irstea@doc/CemOA)
op_collection_id ftcemoa
language English
topic BIOMASSE
ECOSYSTEME
MODELISATION
BIOMASS
ECOSYSTEMS
MODELLING
spellingShingle BIOMASSE
ECOSYSTEME
MODELISATION
BIOMASS
ECOSYSTEMS
MODELLING
Lassalle, G.
Lobry, J.
Le Loc'h, F.
Bustamante, P.
Certain, G.
Delmas, D.
Dupuy, C.
Hily, C.
Labry, C.
Le Pape, O.
Marquis, E.
Petitgas, P.
Pusineri, C.
Ridoux, V.
Spitz, J.
Niquil, N.
Lower trophic levels and detrital biomass control the Bay of Biscay continental shelf food web: Implications for ecosystem management
topic_facet BIOMASSE
ECOSYSTEME
MODELISATION
BIOMASS
ECOSYSTEMS
MODELLING
description The Bay of Biscay (North-East Atlantic) has long been subjected to intense direct and indirect human activities that lead to the excessive degradation and sometimes overexploitation of natural resources. Fisheries management is gradually moving away from single-species assessments to more holistic, multi-species approaches that better respond to the reality of ecosystem processes. Quantitative modelling methods such as Ecopath with Ecosim can be useful tools for planning, implementing and evaluating ecosystem-based fisheries management strategies. The aim of this study was therefore to model the energy fluxes within the food web of this highly pressured ecosystem and to extract practical information required in the diagnosis of ecosystem state/health. A well-described model comprising 30 living and two non-living compartments was successfully constructed with data of local origin, for the Bay of Biscay continental shelf. The same level of aggregation was applied to primary producers, mid-trophic-levels and top-predators boxes. The model was even more general as it encompassed the entire continuum of marine habitats, from benthic to pelagic domains. Output values for most ecosystem attributes indicated a relatively mature and stable ecosystem, with a large proportion of its energy flow originating from detritus. Ecological network analysis also provided evidence that bottom-up processes play a significant role in the population dynamics of upper-trophic-levels and in the global structuring of this marine ecosystem. Finally, a novel metric based on ecosystem production depicted an ecosystem not far from being overexploited. This finding being not entirely consistent over indicators, further analyses based on dynamic simulations are required.
author2 CNRS UNIVERSITE DE LA ROCHELLE UMR 6250 FRA
CEMAGREF BORDEAUX UR EPBX FRA
IRD IFREMER CNRS UNIVERSITE DE MONTPELLIER 2 UMR 212 SETE FRA
IFREMER PLOUZANE FRA
CNRS UNIVERSITE OCCIDENTALE DE BRETAGNE UMR 6539 PLOUZANE FRA
UNIVERSITE EUROPEENNE DE BRETAGNE INRA AGROCAMPUS OUEST UMR 985 RENNES FRA
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lassalle, G.
Lobry, J.
Le Loc'h, F.
Bustamante, P.
Certain, G.
Delmas, D.
Dupuy, C.
Hily, C.
Labry, C.
Le Pape, O.
Marquis, E.
Petitgas, P.
Pusineri, C.
Ridoux, V.
Spitz, J.
Niquil, N.
author_facet Lassalle, G.
Lobry, J.
Le Loc'h, F.
Bustamante, P.
Certain, G.
Delmas, D.
Dupuy, C.
Hily, C.
Labry, C.
Le Pape, O.
Marquis, E.
Petitgas, P.
Pusineri, C.
Ridoux, V.
Spitz, J.
Niquil, N.
author_sort Lassalle, G.
title Lower trophic levels and detrital biomass control the Bay of Biscay continental shelf food web: Implications for ecosystem management
title_short Lower trophic levels and detrital biomass control the Bay of Biscay continental shelf food web: Implications for ecosystem management
title_full Lower trophic levels and detrital biomass control the Bay of Biscay continental shelf food web: Implications for ecosystem management
title_fullStr Lower trophic levels and detrital biomass control the Bay of Biscay continental shelf food web: Implications for ecosystem management
title_full_unstemmed Lower trophic levels and detrital biomass control the Bay of Biscay continental shelf food web: Implications for ecosystem management
title_sort lower trophic levels and detrital biomass control the bay of biscay continental shelf food web: implications for ecosystem management
publishDate 2011
url https://irsteadoc.irstea.fr/cemoa/PUB00034672
op_coverage BISCAYE BAIE
genre North East Atlantic
genre_facet North East Atlantic
op_source 28710
op_relation https://irsteadoc.irstea.fr/cemoa/PUB00034672
op_rights Date de dépôt: 2011-12-06 - Tous les documents et informations contenus dans la base CemOA Publications sont protégés en vertu du droit de propriété intellectuelle, en particulier par le droit d'auteur. La personne consultant la base CemOA Publications peut visualiser, reproduire, ou stocker des copies des publications, à condition que l'information soit seulement pour son usage personnel et non commercial. L'utilisation des travaux universitaires est soumise à autorisation préalable de leurs auteurs. Toute information relative au signalement d'une publication contenue dans CemOA Publications doit inclure la citation bibliographique usuelle : Nom du ou des auteurs, titre et source du document, date et URL de la notice (dc_identifier).
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