Precautionary spatial protection to facilitate the scientific study of habitats and communities under ice shelves in the context of recent, rapid, regional climate change

Recent, rapid climate change is now well documented in the Antarctic, particularly in the Antarctic Peninsula region. One of the most evident signs of climate change has been ice shelf collapse; overall, 87% of the Peninsula’s glaciers have retreated in recent decades. Ice shelf collapse will lead t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Trathan, Phil N., Grant, Susie M., Siegel, Volker, Kock, Karl-Hermann
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.openagrar.de/receive/timport_mods_00004591
https://www.openagrar.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/timport_derivate_00004591/dn051162.pdf
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spelling ftopenagrar:oai:www.openagrar.de:timport_mods_00004591 2023-05-15T13:56:19+02:00 Precautionary spatial protection to facilitate the scientific study of habitats and communities under ice shelves in the context of recent, rapid, regional climate change Trathan, Phil N. Grant, Susie M. Siegel, Volker Kock, Karl-Hermann 2012 https://www.openagrar.de/receive/timport_mods_00004591 https://www.openagrar.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/timport_derivate_00004591/dn051162.pdf eng eng https://www.openagrar.de/receive/timport_mods_00004591 https://www.openagrar.de/servlets/MCRFileNodeServlet/timport_derivate_00004591/dn051162.pdf only signed in user info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Text book Text 2012 ftopenagrar 2022-05-01T23:08:24Z Recent, rapid climate change is now well documented in the Antarctic, particularly in the Antarctic Peninsula region. One of the most evident signs of climate change has been ice shelf collapse; overall, 87% of the Peninsula’s glaciers have retreated in recent decades. Ice shelf collapse will lead to the loss of existing marine habitats and the creation of new habitats. In general, fauna under ice shelves exist in oligotrophic conditions, and because ice shelf collapse may lead to greater nutrient input, there may be consequent loss of some species or communities. Colonisation of new habitats after ice shelf collapse may simply include species from areas that are immediately adjacent to the collapsed ice shelf; however, other complex processes may also take place as warmer wat ers may create opportunities for species to return that were last present during the last interglacial, a warmer period than at present. In addition, altered ecosystem dynamics may allow new species to invade as ocean warming potentially removes physiological barriers that have previously led to the isolation of the Antarctic fauna. Habitats revealed by collapsed ice shelves offer unique scientific opportunities. Given the complexity of the possible interactions and the need to study these in the absence of any other human induced perturbation, we recommend that commercial fishing activities should not be permitted in these habitats. We suggest that in Subareas 48.1, 48.5 and 88.3, areas under existing ice shelves should be preserved for scientific study as Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). We recommend that the boundaries of these areas should henceforth remain fixed, even if the ice shelves recede or collapse in the future. Designation of areas under ice shelves as MPAs for scientific study would fulfil one of the recommendations made by the Antarctic Treaty Meeting of Experts in 2010 Book Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Ice Shelf Ice Shelves OpenAgrar (OA) Antarctic The Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula
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language English
topic Text
spellingShingle Text
Trathan, Phil N.
Grant, Susie M.
Siegel, Volker
Kock, Karl-Hermann
Precautionary spatial protection to facilitate the scientific study of habitats and communities under ice shelves in the context of recent, rapid, regional climate change
topic_facet Text
description Recent, rapid climate change is now well documented in the Antarctic, particularly in the Antarctic Peninsula region. One of the most evident signs of climate change has been ice shelf collapse; overall, 87% of the Peninsula’s glaciers have retreated in recent decades. Ice shelf collapse will lead to the loss of existing marine habitats and the creation of new habitats. In general, fauna under ice shelves exist in oligotrophic conditions, and because ice shelf collapse may lead to greater nutrient input, there may be consequent loss of some species or communities. Colonisation of new habitats after ice shelf collapse may simply include species from areas that are immediately adjacent to the collapsed ice shelf; however, other complex processes may also take place as warmer wat ers may create opportunities for species to return that were last present during the last interglacial, a warmer period than at present. In addition, altered ecosystem dynamics may allow new species to invade as ocean warming potentially removes physiological barriers that have previously led to the isolation of the Antarctic fauna. Habitats revealed by collapsed ice shelves offer unique scientific opportunities. Given the complexity of the possible interactions and the need to study these in the absence of any other human induced perturbation, we recommend that commercial fishing activities should not be permitted in these habitats. We suggest that in Subareas 48.1, 48.5 and 88.3, areas under existing ice shelves should be preserved for scientific study as Marine Protected Areas (MPAs). We recommend that the boundaries of these areas should henceforth remain fixed, even if the ice shelves recede or collapse in the future. Designation of areas under ice shelves as MPAs for scientific study would fulfil one of the recommendations made by the Antarctic Treaty Meeting of Experts in 2010
format Book
author Trathan, Phil N.
Grant, Susie M.
Siegel, Volker
Kock, Karl-Hermann
author_facet Trathan, Phil N.
Grant, Susie M.
Siegel, Volker
Kock, Karl-Hermann
author_sort Trathan, Phil N.
title Precautionary spatial protection to facilitate the scientific study of habitats and communities under ice shelves in the context of recent, rapid, regional climate change
title_short Precautionary spatial protection to facilitate the scientific study of habitats and communities under ice shelves in the context of recent, rapid, regional climate change
title_full Precautionary spatial protection to facilitate the scientific study of habitats and communities under ice shelves in the context of recent, rapid, regional climate change
title_fullStr Precautionary spatial protection to facilitate the scientific study of habitats and communities under ice shelves in the context of recent, rapid, regional climate change
title_full_unstemmed Precautionary spatial protection to facilitate the scientific study of habitats and communities under ice shelves in the context of recent, rapid, regional climate change
title_sort precautionary spatial protection to facilitate the scientific study of habitats and communities under ice shelves in the context of recent, rapid, regional climate change
publishDate 2012
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The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
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The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Ice Shelf
Ice Shelves
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