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Synchronous marine pelagic regime shifts in the Northern Hemisphere.

Beaugrand G, 9.3.
•
Conversi, A
•
Chiba, S
altro
Sugisaki, H.
2014
  • journal article

Periodico
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS - ROYAL SOCIETY. BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Abstract
Regime shifts are characterized by sudden, substantial and temporally persistent changes in the state of an ecosystem. They involve major biological modifications and often have important implications for exploited living resources. In this study, we examine whether regime shifts observed in 11 marine systems from two oceans and three regional seas in the Northern Hemisphere (NH) are synchronous, applying the same methodology to all. We primarily infer marine pelagic regime shifts from abrupt shifts in zooplankton assemblages,with the exception of the East Pacificwhere ecosystemchanges are inferred fromfish. Our analyses provide evidence for quasi-synchronicity of marine pelagic regime shifts both within and between ocean basins, although these shifts lie embedded within considerable regional variability at both year-to-year and lower-frequency time scales. In particular, a regime shift was detected in the late 1980s in many studied marine regions, although the exact year of the observed shift varied somewhat from one basin to another. Another regime shift was also identified in the mid- to late 1970s but concerned less marine regions.We subsequently analyse themain biological signals in relation to changes in NH temperature and pressure anomalies. The results suggest that the main factor synchronizing regime shifts on large scales is NH temperature; however, changes in atmospheric circulation also appear important. We propose that this quasi-synchronous shift could represent the variably lagged biological response in each ecosystem to a large-scale,NHchange of the climatic system, involving both an increase in NH temperature and a strongly positive phase of the Arctic Oscillation. Further investigation is needed to determine the relative roles of changes in temperature and atmospheric pressure patterns and their resultant teleconnections in synchronizing regime shifts at large scales.
DOI
10.1098/rstb.2013.0272
WOS
WOS:000346147200010
Archivio
http://hdl.handle.net/11368/2824723
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-84911943841
Diritti
closed access
license:digital rights management non definito
FVG url
https://arts.units.it/request-item?handle=11368/2824723
Soggetti
  • regime shift

  • synchronicity

  • Northern Hemisphere

  • Marine ecology

Web of Science© citazioni
70
Data di acquisizione
Mar 23, 2024
Visualizzazioni
1
Data di acquisizione
Apr 19, 2024
Vedi dettagli
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