Climate variability drives anchovies and sardines into the North and Baltic Seas

被引:108
作者
Alheit, Juergen [1 ]
Pohlmann, Thomas [2 ]
Casini, Michele [3 ]
Greve, Wulf [4 ]
Hinrichs, Rosemarie [1 ]
Mathis, Moritz [2 ]
O'Driscoll, Kieran [2 ]
Vorberg, Ralf [5 ]
Wagner, Carola [1 ]
机构
[1] Leibniz Inst Balt Sea Res, D-18119 Warnemunde, Germany
[2] Univ Hamburg, Inst Oceanog, D-20146 Hamburg, Germany
[3] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Dept Aquat Resources SLU Aqua, Inst Marine Res, S-45321 Lysekil, Sweden
[4] Museum Hamburg, Forschungsinst Senckenberg, DESY Geb 3, D-22607 Hamburg, Germany
[5] Marine Sci Serv, D-21521 Dassendorf, Germany
关键词
SMALL PELAGIC FISH; ATLANTIC MULTIDECADAL OSCILLATION; WESTERN ENGLISH-CHANNEL; LONG-TERM; REGIME SHIFTS; CIRCULATION; ABUNDANCE; OCEAN; ECOSYSTEM; WATER;
D O I
10.1016/j.pocean.2011.11.015
中图分类号
P7 [海洋学];
学科分类号
070403 [天体物理学];
摘要
European anchovy (Engraulis encrasicolus) and sardine (Sardina pilchardus) are southern, warm water species that prefer temperatures warmer than those found in boreal waters. After about 40 years of absence, they were again observed in the 1990s in increasing quantities in the North Sea and the Baltic Sea. Whereas global warming probably played a role in these northward migrations, the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO), the Atlantic Multidecadal Oscillation (AMO) and the contraction of the subpolar gyre were important influences. Sardine re-invaded the North Sea around 1990, probably mainly as a response to warmer temperatures associated with the strengthening of the NAO in the late 1980s. However, increasing numbers of anchovy eggs, larvae, juveniles and adults have been recorded only since the mid-1990s, when, particularly, summer temperatures started to increase. This is probably a result of the complex dynamics of ocean-atmosphere coupling involving changes in North Atlantic current structures, such as the contraction of the subpolar gyre, and dynamics of AMO. Apparently, climate variability drives anchovies and sardines into the North and Baltic Seas. Here, we elucidate the climatic background of the return of anchovies and sardines to the northern European shelf seas and the changes in the North Sea fish community in the mid-1990s in response to climate variability. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:128 / 139
页数:12
相关论文
共 104 条
[1]
Regime shifts in the Humboldt Current ecosystem [J].
Alheit, J ;
Niquen, M .
PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 2004, 60 (2-4) :201-222
[2]
Long-term climate forcing of European herring and sardine populations [J].
Alheit, J ;
Hagen, E .
FISHERIES OCEANOGRAPHY, 1997, 6 (02) :130-139
[3]
Synchronous ecological regime shifts in the central Baltic and the North Sea in the late 1980s [J].
Alheit, J ;
Möllmann, C ;
Dutz, J ;
Kornilovs, G ;
Loewe, P ;
Mohrholz, V ;
Wasmund, N .
ICES JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE, 2005, 62 (07) :1205-1215
[4]
Alheit J, 2009, CLIMATE CHANGE AND SMALL PELAGIC FISH, P64
[5]
Population synchronies within and between ocean basins: Apparent teleconnections and implications as to physical-biological linkage mechanisms [J].
Alheit, Juergen ;
Bakun, Andrew .
JOURNAL OF MARINE SYSTEMS, 2010, 79 (3-4) :267-285
[6]
Alheit Juergen, 2007, GLOBEC International Newsletter, V13, P77
[7]
[Anonymous], ELSEVIER OCEANOGRAPH
[8]
[Anonymous], 2007B06 ICES CM
[9]
[Anonymous], 1995, GLOBEC REP
[10]
The distribution of anchovy Engraulis encrasicolus in the northern Irish Sea from 1991 to 1999 [J].
Armstrong, MJ ;
Dickey-Collas, M ;
McAliskey, M ;
McCurdy, WJ ;
Burns, CA ;
Peel, JAD .
JOURNAL OF THE MARINE BIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM, 1999, 79 (05) :955-956