Data_Sheet_1_Expert Assessment of Risks Posed by Climate Change and Anthropogenic Activities to Ecosystem Services in the Deep North Atlantic.docx

Sustainable development of the ocean is a central policy objective in Europe through the Blue Growth Strategy and globally through parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity. Achieving sustainable exploitation of deep sea resources is challenged due to the huge uncertainty around the many ris...

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Main Authors: Claire W. Armstrong, Godwin K. Vondolia, Naomi S. Foley, Lea-Anne Henry, Katherine Needham, Adriana Ressurreição
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00158.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/Data_Sheet_1_Expert_Assessment_of_Risks_Posed_by_Climate_Change_and_Anthropogenic_Activities_to_Ecosystem_Services_in_the_Deep_North_Atlantic_docx/8031881
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spelling ftfrontimediafig:oai:figshare.com:article/8031881 2023-05-15T17:32:33+02:00 Data_Sheet_1_Expert Assessment of Risks Posed by Climate Change and Anthropogenic Activities to Ecosystem Services in the Deep North Atlantic.docx Claire W. Armstrong Godwin K. Vondolia Naomi S. Foley Lea-Anne Henry Katherine Needham Adriana Ressurreição 2019-04-24T04:13:20Z https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00158.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/Data_Sheet_1_Expert_Assessment_of_Risks_Posed_by_Climate_Change_and_Anthropogenic_Activities_to_Ecosystem_Services_in_the_Deep_North_Atlantic_docx/8031881 unknown doi:10.3389/fmars.2019.00158.s001 https://figshare.com/articles/Data_Sheet_1_Expert_Assessment_of_Risks_Posed_by_Climate_Change_and_Anthropogenic_Activities_to_Ecosystem_Services_in_the_Deep_North_Atlantic_docx/8031881 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Oceanography Marine Biology Marine Geoscience Biological Oceanography Chemical Oceanography Physical Oceanography Marine Engineering ecosystem services climate change anthropogenic impacts risk deep sea North Atlantic Ocean blue growth Dataset 2019 ftfrontimediafig https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00158.s001 2019-04-24T22:59:18Z Sustainable development of the ocean is a central policy objective in Europe through the Blue Growth Strategy and globally through parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity. Achieving sustainable exploitation of deep sea resources is challenged due to the huge uncertainty around the many risks posed by human activities on these remote ecosystems and the goods and services they provide. We used a Delphi approach, an iterative expert-based survey process, to assess risks to ecosystem services in the North Atlantic Ocean from climate change (water temperature and ocean acidification), the blue economy (fishing, pollution, oil and gas activities, deep seabed mining, maritime and coastal tourism and blue biotechnology), and their cumulative effects. Ecosystem services from the deep sea, identified through the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment framework, were presented in an expert survey to assess the impacts of human drivers on these services. The results from this initial survey were analyzed and then presented in a second survey. The final results, based on 55 expert responses, indicated that pollution and temperature change each pose a high risk to more than 28% of deep-sea ecosystem services, whilst ocean acidification, and fisheries both pose a high risk to more than 19% of the deep-sea ecosystem services. Services considered to be most at risk of being impacted by anthropogenic activities were biodiversity and habitat as supporting services, biodiversity as a cultural service, and fish and shellfish as provisioning services. Tourism and blue biotechnology were not seen to cause serious risk to any of the ecosystem services. The negative impacts from temperature change, ocean acidification, fishing, pollution, and oil and gas activities were deemed to be largely more probable than their positive impacts. These results expand our knowledge of how a broad set of deep-sea ecosystem services are impacted by human activities. Furthermore, the study provides input in relation to future priorities regarding ... Dataset North Atlantic Ocean acidification Frontiers: Figshare
institution Open Polar
collection Frontiers: Figshare
op_collection_id ftfrontimediafig
language unknown
topic Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
ecosystem services
climate change
anthropogenic impacts
risk
deep sea
North Atlantic Ocean
blue growth
spellingShingle Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
ecosystem services
climate change
anthropogenic impacts
risk
deep sea
North Atlantic Ocean
blue growth
Claire W. Armstrong
Godwin K. Vondolia
Naomi S. Foley
Lea-Anne Henry
Katherine Needham
Adriana Ressurreição
Data_Sheet_1_Expert Assessment of Risks Posed by Climate Change and Anthropogenic Activities to Ecosystem Services in the Deep North Atlantic.docx
topic_facet Oceanography
Marine Biology
Marine Geoscience
Biological Oceanography
Chemical Oceanography
Physical Oceanography
Marine Engineering
ecosystem services
climate change
anthropogenic impacts
risk
deep sea
North Atlantic Ocean
blue growth
description Sustainable development of the ocean is a central policy objective in Europe through the Blue Growth Strategy and globally through parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity. Achieving sustainable exploitation of deep sea resources is challenged due to the huge uncertainty around the many risks posed by human activities on these remote ecosystems and the goods and services they provide. We used a Delphi approach, an iterative expert-based survey process, to assess risks to ecosystem services in the North Atlantic Ocean from climate change (water temperature and ocean acidification), the blue economy (fishing, pollution, oil and gas activities, deep seabed mining, maritime and coastal tourism and blue biotechnology), and their cumulative effects. Ecosystem services from the deep sea, identified through the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment framework, were presented in an expert survey to assess the impacts of human drivers on these services. The results from this initial survey were analyzed and then presented in a second survey. The final results, based on 55 expert responses, indicated that pollution and temperature change each pose a high risk to more than 28% of deep-sea ecosystem services, whilst ocean acidification, and fisheries both pose a high risk to more than 19% of the deep-sea ecosystem services. Services considered to be most at risk of being impacted by anthropogenic activities were biodiversity and habitat as supporting services, biodiversity as a cultural service, and fish and shellfish as provisioning services. Tourism and blue biotechnology were not seen to cause serious risk to any of the ecosystem services. The negative impacts from temperature change, ocean acidification, fishing, pollution, and oil and gas activities were deemed to be largely more probable than their positive impacts. These results expand our knowledge of how a broad set of deep-sea ecosystem services are impacted by human activities. Furthermore, the study provides input in relation to future priorities regarding ...
format Dataset
author Claire W. Armstrong
Godwin K. Vondolia
Naomi S. Foley
Lea-Anne Henry
Katherine Needham
Adriana Ressurreição
author_facet Claire W. Armstrong
Godwin K. Vondolia
Naomi S. Foley
Lea-Anne Henry
Katherine Needham
Adriana Ressurreição
author_sort Claire W. Armstrong
title Data_Sheet_1_Expert Assessment of Risks Posed by Climate Change and Anthropogenic Activities to Ecosystem Services in the Deep North Atlantic.docx
title_short Data_Sheet_1_Expert Assessment of Risks Posed by Climate Change and Anthropogenic Activities to Ecosystem Services in the Deep North Atlantic.docx
title_full Data_Sheet_1_Expert Assessment of Risks Posed by Climate Change and Anthropogenic Activities to Ecosystem Services in the Deep North Atlantic.docx
title_fullStr Data_Sheet_1_Expert Assessment of Risks Posed by Climate Change and Anthropogenic Activities to Ecosystem Services in the Deep North Atlantic.docx
title_full_unstemmed Data_Sheet_1_Expert Assessment of Risks Posed by Climate Change and Anthropogenic Activities to Ecosystem Services in the Deep North Atlantic.docx
title_sort data_sheet_1_expert assessment of risks posed by climate change and anthropogenic activities to ecosystem services in the deep north atlantic.docx
publishDate 2019
url https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00158.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/Data_Sheet_1_Expert_Assessment_of_Risks_Posed_by_Climate_Change_and_Anthropogenic_Activities_to_Ecosystem_Services_in_the_Deep_North_Atlantic_docx/8031881
genre North Atlantic
Ocean acidification
genre_facet North Atlantic
Ocean acidification
op_relation doi:10.3389/fmars.2019.00158.s001
https://figshare.com/articles/Data_Sheet_1_Expert_Assessment_of_Risks_Posed_by_Climate_Change_and_Anthropogenic_Activities_to_Ecosystem_Services_in_the_Deep_North_Atlantic_docx/8031881
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2019.00158.s001
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