Seals, cod an forage fish:a comparative exploration of variations in the theme on stock collapse and ecosystem change in northwest Atlantic ecosystems.

The facts: four Northwest Atlantic ecosystems, three cod stock collapses 15 years ago (plus one severely depleted), seals now top predator in all ecosystems, all had cod as a top predator before collapse, groundfish declines in all areas, forage base increased in most systems. No recovery in any sys...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bundy, A, Heymans, Sheila, Morissette, Lynne, Savenkoff, Claude
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pure.uhi.ac.uk/en/publications/70cbcddf-df80-4d34-a027-26cf66b81125
Description
Summary:The facts: four Northwest Atlantic ecosystems, three cod stock collapses 15 years ago (plus one severely depleted), seals now top predator in all ecosystems, all had cod as a top predator before collapse, groundfish declines in all areas, forage base increased in most systems. No recovery in any system. Have these ecosystems fundamentally changed? Why? The challenge: compare and contrast these four ecosystems. The answer: using mass balance models, empirical data and a suite of ecosystem indicators, we explore how and why these systems have changed over time. At the ecosystem and community level, we see broad similarities between ecosystems. However, structurally and functionally these systems have shifted to an alternate state, with changes in predator structure, trophic structure and flow. Crown Copyright (C) 2009 Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.