07.03.2014 Views

standardization of environmental data and information - International ...

standardization of environmental data and information - International ...

standardization of environmental data and information - International ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

One could also make the opposite argument, that these species<br />

lists <strong>and</strong> identities were based on morphological species -- preserved<br />

animals brought into the laboratory <strong>and</strong> identified under the microscope --<br />

whereas it was becoming increasingly evident from molecular studies that<br />

many <strong>of</strong> the populations identified as a single species based on morphology<br />

were actually multiple-species complexes. Molecular genetics based on<br />

DNA sequences showed much greater diversity <strong>and</strong> much more restricted<br />

species distribution than biologists had been led to believe from<br />

morphology-based taxonomy, so from that perspective the percentage <strong>of</strong><br />

endemics could be much higher. Until proper studies were conducted to<br />

look at the molecular genetics <strong>of</strong> species ranges, it would not be known<br />

whether predictions <strong>of</strong> the levels <strong>of</strong> species turnover across the region were<br />

conservative or otherwise.<br />

Temporal variability<br />

It was increasingly evident that, on a variety <strong>of</strong> scales -- seasonal,<br />

interannual, sometimes decadal <strong>and</strong> even multidecadal -- the productivity<br />

regime in the North Pacific Ocean including the CCFZ was changing over<br />

time. As the amount <strong>of</strong> organic carbon sinking to the seafloor <strong>and</strong> the deep<br />

sea changed, community structure was also likely to vary. To underst<strong>and</strong>,<br />

predict <strong>and</strong> monitor the effects <strong>of</strong> mining, those effects would have to be<br />

distinguished from natural temporal variability.<br />

Citing <strong>data</strong> from a number <strong>of</strong> stations across the central North<br />

Pacific, from the slope <strong>of</strong>f California to the North Pacific central gyre, Smith<br />

noted that the amount <strong>of</strong> oxygen respired varied over relatively short time<br />

scales, as did POC flux. There was also evidence <strong>of</strong> longer time scales <strong>of</strong><br />

variability, including major changes on a decadal scale in the productivity <strong>of</strong><br />

the North Pacific Ocean. North Pacific salmon catches <strong>of</strong>f Alaska <strong>and</strong><br />

Washington had shown major shifts about 1976-77 <strong>and</strong> again in 1985-86,<br />

related to long-term climatic changes <strong>and</strong> primary production <strong>of</strong> POC flux.<br />

Similar changes in productivity on decadal time scales were also likely to be<br />

impacting the CCFZ. For example, they affected the lobster fishery in Hawaii,<br />

the survivorship <strong>of</strong> monk seals <strong>and</strong> many components <strong>of</strong> the pelagic food<br />

web. While salmon <strong>of</strong>fered the most elegant example, it was likely that<br />

decadal time-scale variations in the flux <strong>of</strong> POC to the seafloor in the CCFZ<br />

would result in temporal variability in the abundance <strong>and</strong> potentially the<br />

species structure <strong>of</strong> seafloor ecosystems.<br />

75 INTERNATIONAL SEABED AUTHORITY

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!