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Bering
Sea Ecosystem Responding to Changes in Arctic Climate
Effects could extend
from base of food chain to native hunters
March 10, 2006
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Arctic ice
conditions have major impacts on both the creatures who live
on the sea bottom and the predators who subsist on them.
Credit: Peter
West, National Science Foundation
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Physical changes--including
rising air and seawater temperatures and decreasing seasonal ice
cover--appear to be the cause of a series of biological changes
in the northern Bering Sea ecosystem that could have long-range
and irreversible effects on the animals that live there and on
the people who depend on them for their livelihoods.
In a paper published March 10
in the journal Science,
a team of U.S. and Canadian researchers use data from long-term
observations of physical properties and biological communities to
conclude that previously documented physical changes in the
Arctic in recent years are profoundly affecting Arctic life.
The northern Bering Sea
provides critical habitat for large populations of sea ducks,
gray whales, bearded seals and walruses, all of which depend on
small bottom-dwelling creatures for sustenance. These
bottom-dwellers, in turn, are accustomed to colder water
temperatures and long periods of extensive sea ice cover.
However, "a change from
arctic to sub-arctic conditions is under way in the northern
Bering Sea," according to the researchers, and is causing a
shift toward conditions favoring both water-column and
bottom-feeding fish and other animals that until now have stayed
in more southerly, warmer sea waters.
As a result, the ranges of
region's typical inhabitants can be expected to move northward
and away from the small, isolated Native communities on the
Bering Sea coast that subsist on the animals.
"We're seeing that a
change in the physical conditions is driving a change in the
ecosystems," said Jackie Grebmeier, a researcher at the
University of Tennessee and one of the paper's co-authors.
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Jackie Grebmeier,
an NSF-funded researcher at the University of Tennesee,
prepares sediment samples taken from Arctic waters as part of
the Western Shelf-Basin Interactions research project.
Credit: Peter
West, National Science Foundation
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Small
bottom-dwelling creatures such as these form the base of the
Arctic food chain.
Credit: Peter
West, National Science Foundation
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Much of the
research into changes in the Bering Sea was conducted
cooperatively with Canadian scientists aboard the Canadian
Coast Guard icebreaker Sir Wilfrid Laurier.
Credit: Jackie
Grebmeier, University of Tennessee
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Grebmeier said the new
report is unusual in that it looks at the potential effects of a
changing climate in the Arctic primarily through a life-sciences
lens, rather than an analysis of the physics of climate change.
"It's a biology driven, integrated look at what's going on,"
Grebmeier said.
Grebmeier is chief scientist
for the Western Shelf-Basin Interactions (SBI) research project,
which conducted a series of research cruises to observe changes
in the carbon balance of the offshore areas of the Alaskan Arctic
and their effects on the food chain. The cruises included a
number of researchers supported by the National Science
Foundation (NSF), the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), and other federal agencies.
NSF and the Office of Naval
Research (ONR) jointly funded SBI.
NSF and NOAA also funded U.S.
researchers who contributed data collected by the Bering Strait
Environmental Observatory, which annually samples waters in the
northern Bering Sea to assess the biological status of productive
animal communities on the sea floor.
Those highly productive waters
currently act as sponges for carbon dioxide, absorbing quantities
of the gas that otherwise would remain in the atmosphere where it
would be expected to contribute to warming. But, the researchers
say, if the biological trends they observe in the northern Bering
Sea persist and are not reversible, the accompanying shift in
species and ecosystem structure could have important implications
for the role of the sea as a "carbon sink."
James Overland, a co-author of
the paper and an oceanographer at NOAA's Pacific Marine
Environmental Laboratory (PMEL) in Seattle, added that the
changes researchers are observing are not uniform throughout the
Bering Sea. But both are tied to the nature of the sea ice.
"The northern Bering Sea
ecosystem is changing as well as that in the southeast," he
said. "In the southeast, fish population and
(bottom-dweller) animal changes are happening in the context of a
complete loss of sea ice. But in the northern Bering Sea,
ecological changes are occurring in the context of shifts in the
quality of the sea ice. The ice there is broken and thin compared
with ice floes that were more the norm."
Satellite observations and
other measurements, for example, combined with observations of
native Yupik hunters, confirm that sea ice extent and thickness
have become greatly reduced in recent years.
Also, observations by
scientists on the SBI research cruises in 2004--scheduled for
publication in a separate report in the journal Aquatic
Mammals--confirm that
walrus mothers were leaving their pups when sea ice the animals
normally use as a summer resting platform retreated to the north.
Shifts in fish populations have
also been observed, including the appearance much farther north
of juvenile pink salmon in rivers that drain into the Arctic
Ocean. Salmon feed on pollock, a species that is beginning to
appear in larger numbers in the northern Bering Sea, possibly in
response to warmer ocean temperatures.
"What we are seeing,"
Grebmeier concluded, "is a change in the boundary between
the sub-Arctic and the Arctic ecosystem. The potential is real
for an ecosystem shift that will be felt father north."
But, Overland noted, continued
observations are needed to fully understand the scope and
potential permanence of the changes. "Both physical and
biological indicators need to be watched closely over the next
few years to track the persistence of changes in the context of
natural variability," he said.
Source
/ Credit: NSF

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