Transcript ppt - PICES
Ecosystem Processes ECOSYSTEM DEFINITION • Populations and communities of interacting organisms and physical environment with characteristic trophic structure and material (energy) cycles OBJECTIVES FOR ECOSYSTEM PROTECTION • Maintain Predator/prey relationships • Maintain Energy/flow balance • Maintain Habitat and Diversity Ecosystem Measures and Influences Closed Areas Status Catch Levels Gear Effort Management Physical Forcing Objectives for Ecosystem Protection: Maintain predator-prey relationships pelagic forage availability spatial/temporal conc. of fishery impact on forage fish removals of top predators introduction of non-native species CLIMATE and FISHING Maintain diversity species diversity functional (trophic, structural habitat) diversity genetic diversity Maintain energy flow and balance human-induced energy redirection system impacts attributable to energy removal Ecosystem Impacts Assessment Framework: Objectives, sub-objectives, ecosystem indicators OBJECTIVE: MAINTAIN PREDATOR/PREY RELATIONSHIPS SUBOBJECTIVE1: Sustain top predator populations THRESHOLD: Catch levels high enough to cause the biomass of one or more top level predator species to fall below minimum biologically acceptable limits INDICATORS: • • • Population status of top predator species Bycatch levels of sensitive top predators that lack population estimates (sharks, birds) Trophic level of the catch Effects Analysis Objective Subobjective Significance Threshold Indicators Predatorprey relationships Pelagic forage availability Fishery induced changes outside the natural level of abundance or variability for a prey species relative to predator demands Population trends in pelagic forage biomass (quantitative - pollock, Atka mackerel, catch/bycatch trends of forage species, squid and herring) Spatial and temporal concentration of fishery impact on forage Fishery concentration levels high enough to impair the long term viability of ecologically important, nonresource species such as marine mammals and birds Degree of spatial/temporal concentration of fishery on pollock, Atka mackerel, herring, squid and forage species (qualitative) Removal of top predators Catch levels high enough to cause the biomass of one or more top level predator species to fall below minimum biologically acceptable limits Trophic level of the catch Sensitive top predator bycatch levels (quantitative: sharks, birds; qualitative: pinnipeds) Population status of top predator species (whales, pinnipeds, seabirds) relative to minimum biologically acceptable limits Introduction of nonnative species Fishery vessel ballast water and hull fouling organism exchange levels high enough to cause viable introduction of one or more nonnative species, invasive species Total catch levels Effects Analysis (cont.) Objective Subobjective Significance Threshold Indicators Energy flow and balance Energy redirection Long-term changes in system biomass, respiration, production or energy cycling that are outside the range of natural variability due to fishery discarding and offal production practices Trends in discard and offal production levels (quantitative for discards) Scavenger population trends relative to discard and offal production levels (qualitative) Bottom gear effort (qualitative measure of unobserved gear mortality particularly on bottom organisms) Energy removal Long-term changes in system-level biomass, respiration, production or energy cycling that are outside the range of natural variability due to fishery removals of energy Trends in total retained catch levels (quantitative) Effects Analysis (cont.) Objective Subobjective Significance Threshold Indicators Diversity Species diversity Catch removals high enough to cause the biomass of one or more species (target, nontarget) to fall below or to be kept from recovering from levels below minimum biologically acceptable limits Population levels of target, nontarget species relative to MSST or ESA listing thresholds, linked to fishing removals (qualitative) Bycatch amounts of sensitive (low potential population turnover rates) species that lack population estimates (quantitative: sharks, birds, HAPC biota) Number of ESA listed marine species Area closures Functional (trophic, structural habitat) diversity Catch removals high enough to cause a change in functional diversity outside the range of natural variability observed for the system Guild diversity or size diversity changes linked to fishing removals (qualitative) Bottom gear effort (measure of benthic guild disturbance) HAPC biota bycatch Genetic diversity Catch removals high enough to cause a loss or change in one or more genetic components of a stock that would cause the stock biomass to fall below minimum biologically acceptable limits Degree of fishing on spawning aggregations or larger fish (qualitative) Older age group abundances of target groundfish stocks MANAGEMENT INDICATORS Eastern Bering Sea 4 2,500,000 3500 Total catch (t) 2,000,000 Observed bottom trawl duration (24hr days) 3000 2500 2000 3 1,500,000 1,000,000 Total catch GOA AI 2 Trophic level of catch 500,000 1 0 BS 1500 Trophic level (catch) Time trends in bottom trawl effort 1954 1959 1964 1969 1974 1979 1984 1989 1994 1999 1000 Total catch and trophic level of catch 500 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 BSAI Non-target 2001 Year 30,000 25,000 200,000 20,000 150,000 15,000 100,000 10,000 50,000 Effort (1000 hooks) 5,000 Number of seabirds 0 0 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 Year Incidental take of seabirds Longline effort (1,000 hooks) 250,000 60000 50000 40000 30000 20000 10000 0 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 HAPC GOA Non-target 35000 Amount and composition of non-target fish non-specified forage species30000 in catch atch (tons) Seabird bycatch and fishing effort Total Catch (tons) 70000 25000 20000 other species ECOSYSTEM STATUS INDICATORS Seabird population trends Seabird Population Trends Fish community size spectrum Size frequency distribution all fish 16 Environmental fluctuations 14 12 12 11 10 4 1 .0 0 In d e x 2 0 SE Bering SW Bering Gulf of Alaska Southeast - 1 .0 0 Negative trend No discernable trend Positive trend 7.000-8.000 8.000-9.000 6.000-7.000 5.000-6.000 4.000-5.000 3.16 N. Bering/Chukchi 0 .0 0 5 4 3 2 1 0 ln (length midpoint +1) - 2 .0 0 2000 2 .0 0 9.000-10.000 1997 1 5 - m o n t h ru n n in g m e a n 10.000-11.000 1994 5 - m o n t h ru n n in g m e a n 7 6 1991 6 ln (N +1) 1988 PD O 11.000-12.000 1985 3 .0 0 9 8 4.42 1982 8 3.98 4 .0 0 4.23 10 3.65 Fre quency Pa c ific D e c a d a l O sc illa tio n 3.000-4.000 Year 2000 1995 1990 1985 1980 1975 1970 1965 1960 1955 1950 1945 1940 1935 1930 1925 1920 1915 1910 1905 - 4 .0 0 1900 - 3 .0 0 Ye a r Status of structural habitat biota 2000 1500 1000 2000 1998 1996 1994 1992 1990 1988 1986 0 1984 500 1982 Biom ass (t) SEAPENS/W HIPS Population trends of non-target fish species 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 YE AR L yco d es S a rr i t o P o d o th I cel u s sp G ym n o c T ri g l o p C ycl o p t B a t h ym D a syco t H exa g ra Objectives for Ecosystem Protection: Maintain predator-prey relationships pelagic forage availability spatial/temporal conc. of fishery impact on forage fish removals of top predators introduction of non-native species CLIMATE and FISHING Maintain diversity species diversity functional (trophic, structural habitat) diversity genetic diversity Maintain energy flow and balance human-induced energy redirection system impacts attributable to energy removal