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Ecological indicators reveal historical regime shifts in the Black Sea ecosystem
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Date
2023-07-01
Author
Akoğlu, Ekin
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BackgroundThe Black Sea is one of the most anthropogenically disturbed marine ecosystems in the world because of introduced species, fisheries overexploitation, nutrient enrichmentviapollution through river discharge, and the impacts of climate change. It has undergone significant ecosystem transformations since the 1960s. The infamous anchovy and alien warty comb jellyMnemiopsis leidyishift that occurred in 1989 is the most well-known example of the drastic extent of anthropogenic disturbance in the Black Sea. Although a vast body of literature exists on the Black Sea ecosystem, a holistic look at the multidecadal changes in the Black Sea ecosystem using an ecosystem- and ecology-based approach is still lacking. Hence, this work is dedicated to filling this gap.MethodsFirst, a dynamic food web model of the Black Sea extending from 1960 to 1999 was established and validated against time-series data. Next, an ecological network analysis was performed to calculate the time series of synthetic ecological indicators, and a regime shift analysis was performed on the time series of indicators.ResultsThe model successfully replicated the regime shifts observed in the Black Sea. The results showed that the Black Sea ecosystem experienced four regime shifts and was reorganized due to effects instigated by overfishing in the 1960s, eutrophication and establishment of trophic dead-end organisms in the 1970s, and overfishing and intensifying interspecies trophic competition by the overpopulation of some r-selected organisms (i.e., jellyfish species) in the 1980s. Overall, these changes acted concomitantly to erode the structure and function of the ecosystem by manipulating the food web to reorganize itself through the introduction and selective removal of organisms and eutrophication. Basin-wide, cross-national management efforts, especially with regard to pollution and fisheries, could have prevented the undesirable changes observed in the Black Sea ecosystem and should be immediately employed for management practices in the basin to prevent such drastic ecosystem fluctuations in the future.
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11511/105109
Journal
PEERJ
DOI
https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.15649
Collections
Graduate School of Marine Sciences, Article
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E. Akoğlu, “Ecological indicators reveal historical regime shifts in the Black Sea ecosystem,”
PEERJ
, vol. 11, no. e15649, pp. 1–33, 2023, Accessed: 00, 2023. [Online]. Available: https://hdl.handle.net/11511/105109.