| Literature DB >> 29076017 |
Anne-Sophie Crépin1, Åsa Gren2, Gustav Engström2, Daniel Ospina2.
Abstract
We propose a framework to support management that builds on a social-ecological system perspective on the Arctic Ocean. We illustrate the framework's application for two policy-relevant scenarios of climate-driven change, picturing a shift in zooplankton composition and alternatively a crab invasion. We analyse archetypical system dynamics between the socio-economic, the natural, and the governance systems in these scenarios. Our holistic approach can help managers identify looming problems arising from complex system interactions and prioritise among problems and solutions, even when available data are limited.Entities:
Keywords: Arctic Ocean; Integrated ecosystem-based management; Marine food web; Regime shifts; Social–ecological system
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29076017 PMCID: PMC5673876 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-017-0960-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129
Fig. 1Social–ecological connections in the Arctic using the IEBM framework. The numbers refer to scientific articles supporting the arrows (Appendix S3)
Fig. 2Food chain and climate change interactions in an Arctic marine ecosystem
Decrease in Calanus glacialis in favour of Calanus finmarchicus. Insights and key research questions derived from assessing scientific background information using an IEBM lens
| Scenario 1. Decrease in | |
|---|---|
| Background information | References |
| The A grazer | Bogstad et al. ( |
|
| Corten ( |
| Young herrings predate on capelin larvae | Huse and Toresen ( |
|
| Søreide et al. ( |
| In a model simulation of climate change scenarios in the Barents Sea, the Atlantic zooplankton species | Ellingsen et al. ( |
| The red king crabs feed on capelin larvae | Mikkelsen ( |
| Oil spills risk harming vulnerable ecosystems in the Arctic | Nordam et al. ( |
Increase in red king crab (Paralithodes camtschaticus). Insights and key research questions derived from assessing scientific background information using an IEBM lens
| Scenario 2. Increase in red king crab ( | |
|---|---|
| Background information | Reference |
| The red king crab benefits from increased water temperatures in the Arctic | Stoner et al. ( |
| The red king crab is an economically important species | Hjelstedt ( |
| Red king crabs predate capelin larvae | Mikkelsen ( |
| Capelin is a key food species for other economically important fish species, e.g. cod | Søreide et al. ( |
Fig. 3Pathological dynamics in a potential regime shift in primary production
Fig. 4Pathological dynamics in an increase of red king crabs