Representing Variable Habitat Quality in a Spatial Food Web Model

被引:108
作者
Christensen, Villy [1 ]
Coll, Marta [2 ,3 ,4 ]
Steenbeek, Jeroen [2 ,4 ]
Buszowski, Joe [4 ]
Chagaris, Dave [5 ]
Walters, Carl J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ British Columbia, Fisheries Ctr, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada
[2] Ctr Rech Halieut Mediterraneenne & Trop, UMR EME 212, Inst Rech Dev, F-34203 Sete, France
[3] Inst Marine Sci ICM CSIC, Barcelona 08003, Spain
[4] Ecopath Int Initiat Res Assoc, Barcelona, Spain
[5] Fish & Wildlife Res Inst, Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservat Commiss, St Petersburg, FL USA
基金
加拿大自然科学与工程研究理事会;
关键词
food web model; species distribution model; ecopath; ecospace; habitat modeling; foraging capacity model; sampling; simulation model; SPECIES DISTRIBUTION MODELS; MARINE PROTECTED AREAS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; EXPLOITED ECOSYSTEMS; FISHING EFFORT; IMPACTS; DISTRIBUTIONS; BIODIVERSITY; ECOPATH; ECOSIM;
D O I
10.1007/s10021-014-9803-3
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Why are marine species where they are? The scientific community is faced with an urgent need to understand aquatic ecosystem dynamics in the context of global change. This requires development of scientific tools with the capability to predict how biodiversity, natural resources, and ecosystem services will change in response to stressors such as climate change and further expansion of fishing. Species distribution models and ecosystem models are two methodologies that are being developed to further this understanding. To date, these methodologies offer limited capabilities to work jointly to produce integrated assessments that take both food web dynamics and spatial-temporal environmental variability into account. We here present a new habitat capacity model as an implementation of the spatial-temporal model Ecospace of the Ecopath with Ecosim approach. The new model offers the ability to drive foraging capacity of species from the cumulative impacts of multiple physical, oceanographic, and environmental factors such as depth, bottom type, temperature, salinity, oxygen concentrations, and so on. We use a simulation modeling procedure to evaluate sampling characteristics of the new habitat capacity model. This development bridges the gap between envelope environmental models and classic ecosystem food web models, progressing toward the ability to predict changes in marine ecosystems under scenarios of global change and explicitly taking food web direct and indirect interactions into account.
引用
收藏
页码:1397 / 1412
页数:16
相关论文
共 72 条
[1]   Foraging arena theory [J].
Ahrens, Robert N. M. ;
Walters, Carl J. ;
Christensen, Villy .
FISH AND FISHERIES, 2012, 13 (01) :41-59
[2]   Potential impacts of climate change on Northeast Pacific marine foodwebs and fisheries [J].
Ainsworth, C. H. ;
Samhouri, J. F. ;
Busch, D. S. ;
Cheung, W. W. L. ;
Dunne, J. ;
Okey, T. A. .
ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE, 2011, 68 (06) :1217-1229
[3]   From projected species distribution to food-web structure under climate change [J].
Albouy, Camille ;
Velez, Laure ;
Coll, Marta ;
Colloca, Francesco ;
Le Loc'h, Francois ;
Mouillot, David ;
Gravel, Dominique .
GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2014, 20 (03) :730-741
[4]   Exploring fisheries strategies for the western English Channel using an ecosystem model [J].
Araujo, Julio N. ;
Mackinson, Steue ;
Stanford, Richard J. ;
Hart, Paul J. B. .
ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2008, 210 (04) :465-477
[5]   Species distribution models and ecological theory: A critical assessment and some possible new approaches [J].
Austin, Mike .
ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2007, 200 (1-2) :1-19
[6]   Mercury, food webs, and marine mammals: Implications of diet and climate change for human health [J].
Booth, S ;
Zeller, D .
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES, 2005, 113 (05) :521-526
[7]   Projecting global marine biodiversity impacts under climate change scenarios [J].
Cheung, William W. L. ;
Lam, Vicky W. Y. ;
Sarmiento, Jorge L. ;
Kearney, Kelly ;
Watson, Reg ;
Pauly, Daniel .
FISH AND FISHERIES, 2009, 10 (03) :235-251
[8]   Ecopath with Ecosim: methods, capabilities and limitations [J].
Christensen, V ;
Walters, CJ .
ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2004, 172 (2-4) :109-139
[9]   Hundred-year decline of North Atlantic predatory fishes [J].
Christensen, V ;
Guénette, S ;
Heymans, JJ ;
Walters, CJ ;
Watson, R ;
Zeller, D ;
Pauly, D .
FISH AND FISHERIES, 2003, 4 (01) :1-24
[10]   ECOPATH-II - A SOFTWARE FOR BALANCING STEADY-STATE ECOSYSTEM MODELS AND CALCULATING NETWORK CHARACTERISTICS [J].
CHRISTENSEN, V ;
PAULY, D .
ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 1992, 61 (3-4) :169-185