| Literature DB >> 31301003 |
Paulina Martinetto1, Daniela Alemany2, Florencia Botto2, Matías Mastrángelo3, Valeria Falabella4, E Marcelo Acha2,5, Gustavo Antón6, Alejandro Bianchi7, Claudio Campagna8, Guillermo Cañete9, Pablo Filippo10, Oscar Iribarne2, Pedro Laterra11, Patricia Martínez12, Rubén Negri12, Alberto R Piola13, Silvia I Romero14, David Santos15, Martín Saraceno16,17,18.
Abstract
Primary production hotspots in the marine environment occur where the combination of light, turbulence, temperature and nutrients makes the proliferation of phytoplankton possible. Satellite-derived surface chlorophyll-a distributions indicate that these conditions are frequently associated with sharp water mass transitions named "marine fronts". Given the link between primary production, consumers and ecosystem functions, marine fronts could play a key role in the production of ecosystem services (ES). Using the shelf break front in the Argentine Sea as a study case, we show that the high primary production found in the front is the main ecological feature that supports the production of tangible (fisheries) and intangible (recreation, regulation of atmospheric gases) marine ES and the reason why the provision of ES in the Argentine Sea concentrates there. This information provides support to satellite chlorophyll as a good indicator of multiple marine ES. We suggest that marine fronts could be considered as marine ES hot spots.Entities:
Keywords: Argentine Sea; Ecosystem services; Marine fronts; Satellite chlorophyll; South Western Atlantic
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31301003 PMCID: PMC6965551 DOI: 10.1007/s13280-019-01222-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ambio ISSN: 0044-7447 Impact factor: 5.129