Document of bibliographic reference 396531

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Predictors of long-term variability in NE Atlantic plankton communities
Abstract
Anthropogenic pressures such as climate change and nutrient pollution are causing rapid changes in the marine environment. The relative influence of drivers of change on the plankton community remains uncertain, and this uncertainty is limiting our understanding of sustainable levels of human pressures. Plankton are the primary energy resource in marine food webs and respond rapidly to environmental changes, representing useful in?dicators of shifts in ecosystem structure and function. Categorising plankton into broad groups with similar characteristics, known as “lifeforms”, can be useful for understanding ecological patterns related to environ?mental change and for assessing the state of pelagic habitats in accordance with the EU Marine Strategy Framework Directive and the OSPAR Commission, which mandates protection of the North-East Atlantic. We analysed 29 years of Continuous Plankton Recorder data (1993–2021) from the North-East Atlantic to examine how trends in plankton lifeform abundance changed in relation to one another and across gradients of envi?ronmental change associated with human pressures. Random forest models predicted between 57 % and 80 % of the variability in lifeform abundance, based on data not used to train the models. Observed variability was mainly explained by trends in other lifeforms, with mainly positively correlated trends, indicating bottom-up control and/or shared responses to environmental variability were prevalent. Longitude, bathymetry, mixed layer depth, the nitrogen-to‑phosphorus ratio, and temperature were also significant predictors. However, contrasting influences of environmental drivers were detected. For example, small copepod abundance increased in warmer conditions whereas meroplankton, large copepods and fish larvae either decreased or were un?changed. Our findings highlight recent changes in stratification, reflected by variation in mixed layer depth, and imbalanced nutrient ratios are affecting multiple lifeforms, impacting the North-East Atlantic plankton com?munity. To achieve environmental improvements in North-East Atlantic pelagic habitats, it is crucial that we continue to address climate change and reduce nutrient pollution.
Bibliographic citation
Holland, M.; Atkinson, A.; Best, M.; Bresnan, E.; Devlin, M.; Goberville, E.; Helaouët, P.; Machairopoulou, M.; Faith, M.; Thompson, M.S.A.; McQuatters-Gollop, A. (2024). Predictors of long-term variability in NE Atlantic plankton communities. Sci. Total Environ. 952: 175793. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175793
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true

Authors

author
Name
Matthew Holland
author
Name
Angus Atkinson
author
Name
Mike Best
author
Name
Eileen Bresnan
author
Name
Michelle Devlin
author
Name
Eric Goberville
author
Name
Pierre Helaouët
author
Name
Margarita Machairopoulou
author
Name
Matthew Faith
author
Name
Murray Thompson
author
Name
Abigail McQuatters-Gollop

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175793

Document metadata

date created
2024-11-07
date modified
2024-11-07