2002 Strategic Environmental Assessment SEA3 Technical report - Plankton ecology (Addendum to SEA2 report), North Sea

This report is a contribution to the Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA3) conducted by the Department of Trade and Industry (now Department of Energy and Climate Change) and has been written as an addendum to the more comprehensive SEA2 document. The two papers give an overview of the phytoplankton and zooplankton community composition in the North Sea and how this has fluctuated through the latter half of the 20th Century in response to environmental change. The study is based on a unique long-term dataset of plankton abundance in the North Atlantic and the North Sea acquired by the Continuous Plankton Recorder (CPR). The dinoflagellate genus Ceratium dominates the phytoplankton community in the North Sea, but diatoms are also important, especially in the southern part. The normal annual blooms of plankton are discussed, as are harmful algal blooms (HABs), which appear to be on the increase, possibly due to a combination of climatic variability and eutrophication. Among the zooplankton, copepods are particularly important and constitute a major food resource for many commercial fish species, such as cod and herring. Calanus is the dominant copepod genus in the North Atlantic. Other important components of the plankton - meroplankton, picoplankton and megaplankton - are also reviewed. Very small picoplankton (~1 micron in diameter) and much larger gelatinous members of the megaplankton (e.g. jellyfish and ctenophores) are poorly sampled by the CPR. Although the picoplankton represents a sizeable fraction of total primary production, its role in the marine ecosystem is poorly understood.
dataset
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British Geological Survey : BGS_SEA_26
English
Biota
Environment
Oceans
SeaDataNet Parameter Discovery Vocabulary: GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0:
Species distribution
SeaVoX Vertical Co-ordinate Coverages:
Free:
-1.90, 52.80, 3.30, 61.80
publication: 2002-08-01
2001-01-01 - 2001-01-01
British Geological Survey (BGS)
Paul Henni
Murchison House, West Mains Road, Edinburgh, EH9 3LA, UK
tel: +44 (0)131 667 1000
email: offshoredata@bgs.ac.uk
Role: custodian
Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC)
Admiralty Way, London, SW1A 2HD, UK
tel: +44 0300 060 4000
email: enquiries@decc.gsi.gov.uk
Role: originator

Data Quality

This report was prepared by scientists from the Sir Alister Hardy Foundation for Ocean Science (SAHFOS) in August 2002 as part of the UK Department of Energy and Climate Change's Offshore Energy Strategic Environmental Assessment programme. The Continuous Plankton Recorder (CPR) survey provides a unique long-term dataset of plankton abundance in the North Atlantic and North Sea, using ships of opportunity to tow the CPR on regular routes, sampling at a depth of approximately 10m (methodology described in full in Warner and Hays 1994). Each sample represents 18km of tow and approximately 3m3 of filtered seawater. The survey records over 400 taxa of plankton, composed of phytoplankton (plants) and zooplankton (animals) entities, many of which are recorded to species level. It is the only biological survey that can monitor long term changes over broad areas, such as the North Atlantic. The survey began in the North Sea in 1931, with computerised records from 1948 (for this report data were extracted from 1960).
Minimal Distance: 5 http://standards.iso.org/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/ISO_19139_Schemas/resources/uom/gmxUom.xml#m

Constraints

Metadata about metadata

aba64100-c110-4de3-e044-0003ba6f30bd
British Geological Survey (BGS)
Mary Mowat
tel: +44 (0)131 667 1000
email: offshoredata@bgs.ac.uk
Role: point of contact
2011-08-30

Coupled Resource