Is there a connection between high transport of water in the Rockall Trough and ecological changs in the North Sea?
Is there a connection between high transport of water in the Rockall Trough and ecological changs in the North Sea?
Changes in the ecosystem of the North Sea may occur as pronounced inter-annual and step-wise shifts as well as gradual trends. Marked inter-annual shifts have occurred at least twice in the last two decades, the late 1980s and the late 1990s, that appear to reflect an increased inflow of oceanic water and species. Numerical modelling has demonstrated a link between altered rates of inflow of oceanic water into the northern North Sea and a regime shift after 1988. In 1989 and 1997 oceanic species not normally found in the North Sea were observed there, suggesting pulses of oceanic water had entered the basin and triggered the subsequent ecosystem change. The oceanic water has origins mainly west of Britain in the Rockall Trough, where the long-term mean volume transport is around 3.7 Sv northwards (1 Sv=10 6 m3s-1), but in early 1989 and early 1998 was observed to be more than twice the mean value, reaching over 7 Sv. These periods of high transport coinciding with the inferred pulses of oceanic water into the North Sea suggest a connection through the continental shelf edge current.
Rockall Trough, North Sea, interannual variability, zooplankton, phytoplankton, geostrophic transport, shelf edge current
270-274
Holliday, N.P.
358b0b33-f30b-44fd-a193-88365bbf2c79
Reid, P.C.
19af6dfe-2fb2-4923-93c6-c057e940eedd
2001
Holliday, N.P.
358b0b33-f30b-44fd-a193-88365bbf2c79
Reid, P.C.
19af6dfe-2fb2-4923-93c6-c057e940eedd
Holliday, N.P. and Reid, P.C.
(2001)
Is there a connection between high transport of water in the Rockall Trough and ecological changs in the North Sea?
ICES Journal of Marine Science, 58 (1), .
(doi:10.1006/jmsc.2000.1008).
Abstract
Changes in the ecosystem of the North Sea may occur as pronounced inter-annual and step-wise shifts as well as gradual trends. Marked inter-annual shifts have occurred at least twice in the last two decades, the late 1980s and the late 1990s, that appear to reflect an increased inflow of oceanic water and species. Numerical modelling has demonstrated a link between altered rates of inflow of oceanic water into the northern North Sea and a regime shift after 1988. In 1989 and 1997 oceanic species not normally found in the North Sea were observed there, suggesting pulses of oceanic water had entered the basin and triggered the subsequent ecosystem change. The oceanic water has origins mainly west of Britain in the Rockall Trough, where the long-term mean volume transport is around 3.7 Sv northwards (1 Sv=10 6 m3s-1), but in early 1989 and early 1998 was observed to be more than twice the mean value, reaching over 7 Sv. These periods of high transport coinciding with the inferred pulses of oceanic water into the North Sea suggest a connection through the continental shelf edge current.
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Published date: 2001
Keywords:
Rockall Trough, North Sea, interannual variability, zooplankton, phytoplankton, geostrophic transport, shelf edge current
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 1298
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/1298
ISSN: 1054-3139
PURE UUID: 08a42630-1623-4133-9fa7-acea6fba1b7b
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Date deposited: 15 Apr 2004
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:43
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Author:
N.P. Holliday
Author:
P.C. Reid
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