Spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the North Atlantic

There is an accumulating body of evidence to suggest that many marine ecosystems in the North Atlantic, both physically and biologically are responding to changes in regional climate caused predominately by the warming of air and sea surface temperatures (SST) and to a varying degree by the modifica...

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Main Authors: Edwards, M, Beaugrand, G
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://plymsea.ac.uk/id/eprint/5715/
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spelling ftplymouthml:oai:plymsea.ac.uk:5715 2023-05-15T17:31:39+02:00 Spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the North Atlantic Edwards, M Beaugrand, G 2007 http://plymsea.ac.uk/id/eprint/5715/ unknown Edwards, M; Beaugrand, G. 2007 Spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the North Atlantic. UNSPECIFIED. Publication - Book NonPeerReviewed 2007 ftplymouthml 2022-09-13T05:48:23Z There is an accumulating body of evidence to suggest that many marine ecosystems in the North Atlantic, both physically and biologically are responding to changes in regional climate caused predominately by the warming of air and sea surface temperatures (SST) and to a varying degree by the modification of oceanic currents, precipitation regimes and wind patterns. The biological manifestations of rising SST and oceanographic changes have variously taken the form of biogeographical, phenological, physiological and community changes. For example, during the last 40 years there has been a northerly movement of warmer water plankton by 10 degree latitude in the north-east Atlantic and a similar retreat of colder water plankton to the north. This geographical movement is much more pronounced than any documented terrestrial study, presumably due to advective processes playing an important role. Other research has shown that the plankton community in the North Sea has responded to changes in SST by adjusting their seasonality (in some cases a shift in seasonal cycles of over six weeks has been detected), but more importantly the response to climate warming varied between different functional groups and trophic levels, leading to mismatch. Therefore, while it has been documented that marine ecosystems in certain regions of the Atlantic have undergone some conspicuous changes over the last few decades it is not known whether this is a pan-oceanic homogenous response. Using these two most prominent responses and/or indicative signals of pelagic ecosystems to hydro-climatic change, changes in species phenology and the biogeographical movement of populations, we attempt to identify vulnerable regional areas in terms of particularly rapid and marked change. Text North Atlantic North East Atlantic Plymouth Marine Science Electronic Archive (PlyMSEA - Plymouth Marine Laboratory, PML)
institution Open Polar
collection Plymouth Marine Science Electronic Archive (PlyMSEA - Plymouth Marine Laboratory, PML)
op_collection_id ftplymouthml
language unknown
description There is an accumulating body of evidence to suggest that many marine ecosystems in the North Atlantic, both physically and biologically are responding to changes in regional climate caused predominately by the warming of air and sea surface temperatures (SST) and to a varying degree by the modification of oceanic currents, precipitation regimes and wind patterns. The biological manifestations of rising SST and oceanographic changes have variously taken the form of biogeographical, phenological, physiological and community changes. For example, during the last 40 years there has been a northerly movement of warmer water plankton by 10 degree latitude in the north-east Atlantic and a similar retreat of colder water plankton to the north. This geographical movement is much more pronounced than any documented terrestrial study, presumably due to advective processes playing an important role. Other research has shown that the plankton community in the North Sea has responded to changes in SST by adjusting their seasonality (in some cases a shift in seasonal cycles of over six weeks has been detected), but more importantly the response to climate warming varied between different functional groups and trophic levels, leading to mismatch. Therefore, while it has been documented that marine ecosystems in certain regions of the Atlantic have undergone some conspicuous changes over the last few decades it is not known whether this is a pan-oceanic homogenous response. Using these two most prominent responses and/or indicative signals of pelagic ecosystems to hydro-climatic change, changes in species phenology and the biogeographical movement of populations, we attempt to identify vulnerable regional areas in terms of particularly rapid and marked change.
format Text
author Edwards, M
Beaugrand, G
spellingShingle Edwards, M
Beaugrand, G
Spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the North Atlantic
author_facet Edwards, M
Beaugrand, G
author_sort Edwards, M
title Spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the North Atlantic
title_short Spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the North Atlantic
title_full Spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the North Atlantic
title_fullStr Spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the North Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the North Atlantic
title_sort spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the north atlantic
publishDate 2007
url http://plymsea.ac.uk/id/eprint/5715/
genre North Atlantic
North East Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
North East Atlantic
op_relation Edwards, M; Beaugrand, G. 2007 Spatial variability of marine climate change impacts in the North Atlantic. UNSPECIFIED.
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