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Contrasted spatio-temporal changes in the demersal fish assemblages and the dominance of the environment vs fishing pressure, in the Bay of Biscay and Celtic Sea.

Authors :
Eme, David
Rufino, Marta M.
Trenkel, Verena M.
Vermard, Youen
Laffargue, Pascal
Petitgas, Pierre
Pellissier, Loïc
Albouy, Camille
Source :
Progress in Oceanography. Jun2022, Vol. 204, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

[Display omitted] • The spatiotemporal dynamics of demersal fish communities were investigated in the Bay of Biscay (BoB) and Celtic Sea (CS). • Two decades of changes in temperature, trophic resources, habitat and fishing pressure on community were assessed. • Diversity patterns showed greater variability in space than in time and species richness and abundance weakly changed. • Communities are becoming more spatially similar (homogeneous) in the CS and differentiated in the BoB. • Such patterns are best explained by the dynamics of trophic resources mediated by small pelagic species. Climate change and resource exploitation represent strong selection pressure affecting the spatio-temporal dynamics of marine assemblages that ensure food provision for humans. However, such dynamics remain poorly documented, and their drivers unclear. Here, we investigate changes in fish assemblages of two key European fishing areas, the Bay of Biscay (BoB) and the Celtic Sea (CS), during the last two decades. We quantify the relative contribution of change in energy (i.e. temperature and trophic resources), habitat (depth, substrate, oxygen) and fishing pressure to explaining observed spatial and temporal variations in fish diversity. We used long-term scientific surveys to evaluate the spatio-temporal changes in species richness (SR), abundance and composition of demersal fish (Actinopterygii) assemblages at different spatial scales combined with a range of regression models and variance partitioning. Diversity patterns showed greater variability in space than in time: SR weakly changed over time, while compositional dissimilarity showed local patterns of taxonomic homogenization in the CS and differentiation in the southern BoB, where local assemblages were becoming more similar and dissimilar over time, respectively. Energy funnelled through small pelagic species as a potential trophic link affecting the dynamics of demersal assemblages was the most important driver, while habitat and fishing pressure had limited importance. Our study revealed contrasted dynamics of demersal fish assemblages at a regional scale that were best explained by the dynamics of small pelagic species. Direct effects of environmental forcing and fishing pressure were limited in both regions which have a long history of fishing and still remain relatively buffered from global warming effects. This research paved the way to combine methods inspired by biogeography with scientific monitoring surveys to detect spatio-temporal dynamics of fish assemblages and their drivers in marine ecosystems under multiple pressures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00796611
Volume :
204
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Progress in Oceanography
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
156914841
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pocean.2022.102788