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An ecological model of the Northern and Central Adriatic Sea: Analysis of ecosystem structure and fishing impacts

Authors :
Marta Coll
Sergi Tudela
Isabel Palomera
Alberto Santojanni
Enrico Arneri
Source :
Digital.CSIC. Repositorio Institucional del CSIC, instname
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2007.

Abstract

36 pages<br />A trophic mass-balance model was developed to characterise the food web structure and functioning of the Northern and Central Adriatic Sea and to quantify the ecosystem impacts of fishing during the 1990s. Forty functional groups were described, including target and non-target fish and invertebrate groups, and three detritus groups (natural detritus, discards and by-catch of cetaceans and marine turtles). Results highlighted that there was an important coupling between pelagic–benthic production of plankton, benthic invertebrates and detritus. Organisms located at low and medium trophic levels, (i.e. benthic invertebrates, zooplankton and anchovy), as well as dolphins, were identified as keystone groups of the ecosystem. Jellyfish were an important element in terms of consumption and production of trophic flows within the ecosystem. The analysis of trophic flows of zooplankton and detritus groups indirectly underlined the importance of the microbial food web in the Adriatic Sea.<br />Fishing activities inflicted notable impacts on the ecosystem during the 1990s, with a high gross efficiency of the fishery, a high consumption of fishable production, high exploitation rates for various target and non target species, a low trophic level of the catch and medium values of primary production required to sustain the fishery. Moreover, the analysis of Odum's ecological indicators highlighted that the ecosystem was in a low-medium developmental stage. Bottom trawling (Strascico), mid-water trawling (Volante) and beam trawling (Rapido) fleets had the highest impacts on both target and non target ecological groups. On the contrary, purse seining (Lampara) showed medium to low impacts on the ecosystem; cetaceans, marine turtles and sea birds were not significantly involved in competition with fishing activity<br />This work has been possible under a bilateral Cooperative-Agreement between CNR (Italy) and CSIC (Spain). During the work, M.C. was supported financially by a FPI fellowship from the MYCT of the Spanish Government

Details

ISSN :
09247963
Volume :
67
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Marine Systems
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....624bb371a5940a66e6a5edc5e6cf9389
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmarsys.2006.10.002