MCCIP ARC Science Review 2010-11:Shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology

There is evidence that climatic processes influence species abundance and community composition in soft-sediment habitats in the North Sea. There is no obvious signal of warming effects in sediments in southern and south-western areas where changes would be most expected. However, changes in crustac...

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Main Authors: Birchenough, Silvana, Bremner, Julie, Henderson, Peter, Hinz, Hilmar, Jenkins, Stuart, Mieszkowska, Nova, van der Kooij, Jeroen
Format: Book
Language:unknown
Published: Marine Climate Change Impacts Partnership 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/58763/
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spelling ftuniveastangl:oai:ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk:58763 2023-05-15T17:51:47+02:00 MCCIP ARC Science Review 2010-11:Shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology Birchenough, Silvana Bremner, Julie Henderson, Peter Hinz, Hilmar Jenkins, Stuart Mieszkowska, Nova van der Kooij, Jeroen 2010 https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/58763/ unknown Marine Climate Change Impacts Partnership Birchenough, Silvana, Bremner, Julie, Henderson, Peter, Hinz, Hilmar, Jenkins, Stuart, Mieszkowska, Nova and van der Kooij, Jeroen (2010) MCCIP ARC Science Review 2010-11:Shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology. MCCIP Annual Report Card, 2010-2011. Marine Climate Change Impacts Partnership, Lowestoft. Book NonPeerReviewed 2010 ftuniveastangl 2023-01-30T21:43:44Z There is evidence that climatic processes influence species abundance and community composition in soft-sediment habitats in the North Sea. There is no obvious signal of warming effects in sediments in southern and south-western areas where changes would be most expected. However, changes in crustacean abundance in some locations and the occurrence of previously undocumented species in others (e.g. brittle star Amphiura incana and shrimp Athanas nitescens) suggest some degree of climate-influence. Hard-substrate habitats in southern and south-westerly waters appear to be affected, with disease outbreaks in seafans, changes in algae distribution and abundance and the appearance and increased occurrence of a previously unrecorded warm-water barnacle all linked to increased seawater temperatures. Climate change is likely to impact the benthos in future. The changes documented in soft-sediment communities are expected to continue, and probably escalate, in response to the cumulative effects of seawater warming and ocean acidification. Species forming cold-water coral reefs and maerl beds may experience shifts in distribution as a result of intolerance to altered seawater temperature and chemistry, with knock-on effects on community composition and function. Future impacts on these habitats are likely to have socio-economic ramifications, as cold-water coral reefs and maerl beds are protected under European legislation and soft-sediment communities are an important food resource for commercial fish. There are knowledge-gaps in a number of areas. We are currently unable to fully assess the scale of benthic species and community responses in relation to climate change, understand links between impacts in benthic and pelagic systems or model future species distributions. An appropriate benthic monitoring and assessment programme, coupled with continued involvement in international initiatives, is essential for characterising climate impacts in UK benthos. Book Ocean acidification University of East Anglia: UEA Digital Repository
institution Open Polar
collection University of East Anglia: UEA Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftuniveastangl
language unknown
description There is evidence that climatic processes influence species abundance and community composition in soft-sediment habitats in the North Sea. There is no obvious signal of warming effects in sediments in southern and south-western areas where changes would be most expected. However, changes in crustacean abundance in some locations and the occurrence of previously undocumented species in others (e.g. brittle star Amphiura incana and shrimp Athanas nitescens) suggest some degree of climate-influence. Hard-substrate habitats in southern and south-westerly waters appear to be affected, with disease outbreaks in seafans, changes in algae distribution and abundance and the appearance and increased occurrence of a previously unrecorded warm-water barnacle all linked to increased seawater temperatures. Climate change is likely to impact the benthos in future. The changes documented in soft-sediment communities are expected to continue, and probably escalate, in response to the cumulative effects of seawater warming and ocean acidification. Species forming cold-water coral reefs and maerl beds may experience shifts in distribution as a result of intolerance to altered seawater temperature and chemistry, with knock-on effects on community composition and function. Future impacts on these habitats are likely to have socio-economic ramifications, as cold-water coral reefs and maerl beds are protected under European legislation and soft-sediment communities are an important food resource for commercial fish. There are knowledge-gaps in a number of areas. We are currently unable to fully assess the scale of benthic species and community responses in relation to climate change, understand links between impacts in benthic and pelagic systems or model future species distributions. An appropriate benthic monitoring and assessment programme, coupled with continued involvement in international initiatives, is essential for characterising climate impacts in UK benthos.
format Book
author Birchenough, Silvana
Bremner, Julie
Henderson, Peter
Hinz, Hilmar
Jenkins, Stuart
Mieszkowska, Nova
van der Kooij, Jeroen
spellingShingle Birchenough, Silvana
Bremner, Julie
Henderson, Peter
Hinz, Hilmar
Jenkins, Stuart
Mieszkowska, Nova
van der Kooij, Jeroen
MCCIP ARC Science Review 2010-11:Shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology
author_facet Birchenough, Silvana
Bremner, Julie
Henderson, Peter
Hinz, Hilmar
Jenkins, Stuart
Mieszkowska, Nova
van der Kooij, Jeroen
author_sort Birchenough, Silvana
title MCCIP ARC Science Review 2010-11:Shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology
title_short MCCIP ARC Science Review 2010-11:Shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology
title_full MCCIP ARC Science Review 2010-11:Shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology
title_fullStr MCCIP ARC Science Review 2010-11:Shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology
title_full_unstemmed MCCIP ARC Science Review 2010-11:Shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology
title_sort mccip arc science review 2010-11:shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology
publisher Marine Climate Change Impacts Partnership
publishDate 2010
url https://ueaeprints.uea.ac.uk/id/eprint/58763/
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_relation Birchenough, Silvana, Bremner, Julie, Henderson, Peter, Hinz, Hilmar, Jenkins, Stuart, Mieszkowska, Nova and van der Kooij, Jeroen (2010) MCCIP ARC Science Review 2010-11:Shallow and shelf subtidal habitats and ecology. MCCIP Annual Report Card, 2010-2011. Marine Climate Change Impacts Partnership, Lowestoft.
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