Cross-ecosystem analyses of pelagic food web structure and processes in the Baltic Sea

被引:18
|
作者
Sandberg, J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Stockholm Univ, Dept Syst Ecol, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden
关键词
Baltic Sea; carbon budget; food web; pelagic; bacterial loop; ecopath;
D O I
10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2006.09.023
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
This study compares Ecopath models of mass flow of carbon through pelagic food webs in the three major basins of the Baltic Sea: Bothnian Bay (BB), Bothnian Sea (BS) and the Baltic proper (BP) including the Gulfs of Finland and Riga. The carbon flows in the models were estimated indirectly based on monitoring data of bacterial and primary productivity as well as on literature data on predator's diets and size-fractionated primary production. Analysis of the carbon flows suggested that in order to present a good balance between inputs and losses of carbon to each system, the most sensitive factor in the models, e.g. averaged monitoring data on bacterial productivity had to be lowered for the BB and BS, whereas it was raised for the BP basin. The final model configuration resulted in fairly realistic productivity estimates and carbon demands for individual compartments in each area. The supply of carbon via autochthonous primary production was highest in the Baltic proper (192 g Cm-2 year(-1)), whereas it was estimated 3 and 11 times lower in the BS and the BB, respectively. The input of allochthonous sources, via terrigenous dissolved organic carbon as well as advection between basins was relatively higher towards the north, being 7.4, 11.6, and 22 g C m(-2) year(-1) in the BP, BS, and BB, respectively Along with the higher allochthonous supply there was a gradual increase in bacterial production relative to particulate primary production since that ratio was 20%, 60% and 160% in the BP, BS and BB, respectively The relatively higher bacterial production as compared to primary production towards the north of the Baltic Sea resulted in systematic differences in carbon flow between basins. The flow from particulate primary production to the classic food chain (zooplankton and Mysids) and the microbial food web was fairly similar between areas. However, the demand for particulate primary production by the microbial food web was 79%, 54% and 29% in the BP, BS and BB, respectively. The present study thus give further indirect support to the view that the carbon flow through the microbial food web is enhanced in less productive aquatic systems with relatively high input of allochthonous carbon such as the Bothnian Sea and the Bothnian Bay. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:243 / 261
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Food-web comparisons between two shallow vegetated habitat types in the Baltic Sea
    Kahma, T., I
    Karlson, A. M. L.
    Lienart, C.
    Morth, C-M
    Humborg, C.
    Norkko, A.
    Rodil, I. F.
    MARINE ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH, 2021, 169
  • [42] Food web models reveal potential ecosystem effects of seagrass recovery in the northern Wadden Sea
    Horn, Sabine
    Coll, Marta
    Asmus, Harald
    Dolch, Tobias
    RESTORATION ECOLOGY, 2021, 29
  • [43] Carbon Flows Through the Pelagic Sub-food Web in Two Basins of the Chilean Patagonian Coastal Ecosystem: the Significance of Coastal–Ocean Connection on Ecosystem Parameters
    Héctor J. Pavés
    Humberto E. González
    Leonardo Castro
    José L. Iriarte
    Estuaries and Coasts, 2015, 38 : 179 - 191
  • [44] Prey dominance shapes trophic structure of the northern California Current pelagic food web: evidence from stable isotopes and diet analysis
    Miller, Todd W.
    Brodeur, Richard D.
    Rau, Greg
    Omori, Koji
    MARINE ECOLOGY PROGRESS SERIES, 2010, 420 : 15 - 26
  • [45] Nutrients Affecting the Characteristics of Food-Web Structure in Aquatic Ecosystem of Pearl River
    Gang, Xiang
    Long, Shengxing
    Dang, Anzhi
    POLISH JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL STUDIES, 2022, 31 (05): : 4641 - 4658
  • [46] Studying the Dynamics of the Transformation Processes for Nitrogen and Phosphorus Compounds in the Ecosystem of the Vistula Lagoon of the Baltic Sea Using Mathematical Modeling
    Podgornyy, K. A.
    Dmitrieva, O. A.
    INLAND WATER BIOLOGY, 2024, 17 (04) : 513 - 533
  • [47] Microbial food web changes induced by terrestrial organic matter and elevated temperature in the coastal northern Baltic Sea
    Andersson, Agneta
    Griniene, Evelina
    Berglund, Asa M. M.
    Brugel, Sonia
    Gorokhova, Elena
    Figueroa, Daniela
    Gallampois, Christine
    Ripszam, Matyas
    Tysklind, Mats
    FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE, 2023, 10
  • [48] Small-scale spatial structure of Baltic Sea zoobenthos -: inferring processes from patterns
    Bergström, U
    Englund, G
    Bonsdorff, E
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MARINE BIOLOGY AND ECOLOGY, 2002, 281 (1-2) : 123 - 136
  • [49] Carbon Flows Through the Pelagic Sub-food Web in Two Basins of the Chilean Patagonian Coastal Ecosystem: the Significance of Coastal-Ocean Connection on Ecosystem Parameters
    Paves, Hector J.
    Gonzalez, Humberto E.
    Castro, Leonardo
    Iriarte, Jose L.
    ESTUARIES AND COASTS, 2015, 38 (01) : 179 - 191
  • [50] Changes in the Baltic Sea coastal food web: A case study on the invasion of Round goby Neogobius melanostomus (Pallas, 1814)
    Morkune, R.
    Tomczak, M. T.
    Bacevicius, E.
    Gasiunaite, Z. R.
    ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE, 2024, 296