Paleoecological studies on variability in marine fish populations: A long-term perspective on the impacts of climatic change on marine ecosystems

被引:62
作者
Finney, Bruce P. [1 ]
Alheit, Juergen [2 ]
Emeis, Kay-Christian [3 ]
Field, David B. [4 ]
Gutierrez, Dimitri [5 ]
Struck, Ulrich [6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Alaska Fairbanks, Sch Fisheries & Ocean Sci, Fairbanks, AK USA
[2] Leibniz Inst Balt Sea Res, Warnemunde, Germany
[3] Univ Hamburg, Inst Biogeochem & Marine Chem, Hamburg, Germany
[4] Monterey Bay Aquarium Res Inst, Moss Landing, CA USA
[5] Inst Mar Per, Direcc Invest Oceanog, Callao, Peru
[6] Museum Nat Kunde, D-10115 Berlin, Germany
关键词
Marine fish remains; Marine sediments; Paleoclimate; Paleoceanography; Holocene; Northeastern Pacific; California Current System; Humboldt Current System; Benguela Current System; NORTHERN CHILE 23-DEGREES-S; BRITISH-COLUMBIA; PELAGIC FISH; NORTHEASTERN PACIFIC; ANCHOVY POPULATIONS; SALMON STOCKS; SARDINE; SEDIMENTS; ALASKA; RECORD;
D O I
10.1016/j.jmarsys.2008.12.010
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The use of historical fishing records to understand relationships between climatic change and fish abundance is limited by the relatively short duration of these records, and complications due to the strong influence of human activity in addition to climatic change. Sedimentary records containing scales, bones or geochemical proxies of variability in fish populations provide unique insights on long-term ecosystem dynamics and relationships with climatic change. Available records from Holocene sediments are summarized and synthesized. The records are from several widespread locations near or along the continental margins of the South Atlantic and Pacific oceans, including Alaska, USA (Pacific salmon), Saanich and Effingham Inlets, British Columbia, Canada (pelagic fish), Santa Barbara Basin, California, USA (Northern anchovies and Pacific sardines), Gulf of California, Mexico (Pacific sardines, Northern anchovies and Pacific hake), Peru upwelling system (sardines, anchovies and hake). and Benguela Current System, South Africa (sardines, anchovies and hake). These records demonstrate that fish population sizes are not constant, and varied significantly over a range of time scales prior to the advent of large-scale commercial fishing. In addition to the decadal-scale variability commonly observed in historical records, the long-term records reveal substantial variability over centennial and millennial time scales. Shifts in abundance are often, but not always, correlated with regional and/or global climatic changes. The long-term perspective reveals different patterns of variability in fish populations, as well as fish-climate relationships, than suggested by analysis of historical records. Many records suggest prominent changes in fish abundance at ca. 1000-1200 AD, during the Little Ice Age, and during the transition at the end of the Little Ice Age in the 19th century that may be correlative, and that were likely driven by major hemispheric or global reorganizations in the earth's climate system. Additional sedimentary records of marine fish abundance and corresponding paleoenvironmental conditions are likely to further enhance our understanding of marine ecosystem dynamics. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:316 / 326
页数:11
相关论文
共 67 条
  • [1] Alheit J, 2002, CLIMATE DEVELOPMENT AND HISTORY OF THE NORTH ATLANTIC REALM, P435
  • [2] Long-term climate forcing of European herring and sardine populations
    Alheit, J
    Hagen, E
    [J]. FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY, 1997, 6 (02) : 130 - 139
  • [3] Alheit J, 2009, CLIMATE CHANGE AND SMALL PELAGIC FISH, P64
  • [4] Population synchronies within and between ocean basins: Apparent teleconnections and implications as to physical-biological linkage mechanisms
    Alheit, Juergen
    Bakun, Andrew
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MARINE SYSTEMS, 2010, 79 (3-4) : 267 - 285
  • [5] Alheit Juergen, 2001, P247
  • [6] [Anonymous], CALIFORNIA COOPERATI
  • [7] BAUMGARTNER TR, 1992, CAL COOP OCEAN FISH, V33, P24
  • [8] Recent shifts in the state of the North Pacific
    Bond, NA
    Overland, JE
    Spillane, M
    Stabeno, P
    [J]. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2003, 30 (23) : CLM1 - 1
  • [9] Brodeur R.D., 1992, Fisheries Oceanography, V1, P32, DOI 10.1111/j.1365-2419.1992.tb00023.x
  • [10] Holocene coastal glaciation of Alaska
    Calkin, PE
    Wiles, GC
    Barclay, DJ
    [J]. QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2001, 20 (1-3) : 449 - 461