3-7 September 2018
Audimax | Kiel University
Europe/Berlin timezone

Pelagic key species and mechanisms driving energy flows in the northern Benguela upwelling ecosystem and their feedback into biogeochemical cycles

3 Sep 2018, 16:45
15m
Audimax-Hörsaal-C (Kiel University)

Audimax-Hörsaal-C

Kiel University

166
Oral 02 Ecosystem Impacts 02 Ecosystem Impacts

Speaker

Dr Werner Ekau (Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research)

Description

The northern Benguela Upwelling System (nBUS) has been facing increasing temperatures and decreasing dissolved oxygen (DO) levels over the last decades. This has implications for key processes and trophic interactions within the ecosystem including shifts in community composition, distribution ranges, and trophic levels, changes in energy flows and migration patterns with feedbacks to biogeochemical processes. Here we summarise the results gained from the GENUS project (Geochemistry and Ecology of the Namibian Upwelling System) focussing on the geochemical and ecological structures and processes dominating the pelagic component of the nBUS. Spatial and temporal distribution patterns of key species of zooplankton and fish larvae allowed biomass estimates (5 to 81 g Wet Mass m-2 (10 to 90% quantile) with a median of 19.5 g Wet Mass m-2 for the upper 200 m) and potential impacts on the vertical carbon flux. Vertical distribution ranges of key taxa were determined reflecting their specific abilities to tolerate hypoxia and, hence, their different adaptive mechanisms to cope with the OMZ. The shoaling of the 2.5 mL-oxycline (0.24 m y-1) constrains sensitive species and hampers daily and seasonal vertical migrations. It may also affect the ability of organisms to maintain themselves within nearshore habitats by hindering vertical migration into deeper onshore currents. Respiration rates of key species were determined with one standard method (optode respirometry) showing an average respiration rate of 54.6 mL O2 d-1 (g Dry Mass) -1 for the bulk fraction of mesozooplankton allowing also the estimate of DO consumption by mesozooplankton at different depth layers. Stable isotopic ratios (N, C) revealed trophic interactions and positions of zooplankton and fish. Our results show many players within a small range of trophic levels and a dominance of zooplankton taxa (copepods, euphausiids) in terms of biomass over small pelagic fish (sardine, anchovy), essential for future higher-resolution ecosystem modelling.

Email Address werner.ekau@leibniz-zmt.de
Affiliation ZMT
Position Senior Scientist
Are you a SFB 754 / Future Ocean member? No

Primary author

Dr Werner Ekau (Leibniz Centre for Tropical Marine Research)

Co-authors

Dr Holger Auel (Universtiy Bremen) Dr Rolf Koppelmann (University Hamburg) Prof. Wilhelm Hagen (University Bremen)

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