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Transcript
1.- Título
Key ecosystem functions and processes in areas beyond national
jurisdiction
Dr. Eulogio Soto Oyarzún, Marine Biologist, Universidad de Valparaíso
Chile
2.- Theoretical cross section of the oceans
Oceans comprise both pelagic and benthic realm. The marine pelagic
environment is the largest realm on Earth, constituting 99% of the
biosphere volume while the deep sea, defined as water and sea floor
(benthic) areas below 200 meters, comprises 90% of the biosphere.
Some two thirds
of the world’s oceans are beyond national
jurisdiction.
3.- NOCS Map
The international community has recognised the importance of
biodiversity as fundamental to achieving global sustainable
development, and is now committed to achieving integrated
management through ecosystem and precautionary approaches. But
marine resources in areas beyond national jurisdiction (ABNJ) are
under increasing pressure from human impacts, putting at risk
biodiversity, ecosystem processes and function. There is a heightened
focus on whether current arrangements and policies are Adequate
(IUCN 2008)
The map shows In light blue, 200 nautical mile maritime zones
In red, Continental shelf beyond 200 nautical miles
4.- Bio images
The oceans play a critical role in the climate and functioning of the
planet, and are crucial for human nutrition, biodiversity and
development. These areas of open ocean and deep sea contain fragile
features such as seamount communities, abyssal plains, trenches, cold
water corals and hydrothermal vents as well as important feeding
areas for migrating species.
5.- Ecosystem function definition
Ecosystem function is the capacity of natural processes and components to
provide goods and services that satisfy human needs, either directly or
indirectly (de Groot et al 2002). Ecosystem functions are conceived as a
subset of ecological processes and ecosystem structures. Natural processes,
in turn, are the result of complex interactions between biotic (living
organisms) and abiotic (chemical and physical) components of ecosystems
through the universal driving forces of matter and energy.
6.- Groups of ecosystem functions
According to Pacala & Kinzig 2002, there are three classes of ecosystem
functions:
-Stocks of energy and materials (for example, biomass, genes)
-Fluxes of energy or material processing (for example, productivity,
decomposition
- Stability of rates or stocks over time (for example, resilience, predictability).
According to de Groot et al. 2002 there are four primary groups of ecosystem
functions:
- Regulatory, habitat, production and information
7.- What ecosystem functions and processes exist in areas beyond national
jurisdiction?
8.- Following de Millenium Ecosystem Assessment they are Supporting,
Provisioning, Regulating and Cultural services
9.- Supporting services are those functions that are necessary for the
production of all other ecosystem services, i.e. they feed into provisioning,
regulating and cultural services, and thereby only enter into human wellbeing indirectly.4 They differ from regulating, provisioning, and cultural
services in that their impacts on people are usually indirect, both physically
and temporally, whereas changes in the other categories have relatively
direct impacts on people. Some services can be categorized as either a
supporting or a regulating service, depending on the time scale and
immediacy of their impact on people, this is the case for instance with
nutrient cycling. Examples of supporting services are habitat, nutrient cycling,
water circulation and exchange, primary production, and resilience.
10.- Habitat
The deep sea is the largest habitat on Earth. It hosts some of the most
diverse ecosystems on the planet (e.g. Koslow 2007) in a wide variety of
habitats such as seamounts, cold water coral reefs, hydrothermal vents, cold
seeps, submarine canyons, open slopes and basins. With such a diversity of
habitats and features the seabed is thought to be home to 98% of all marine
species, and more species may live in deep seabed environments than in all
other marine environments combined (Gjerde 2006). The wide variety of
habitats gives rise to unique organisms and life forms with amazing
adaptations to these harsh environments.
11.- Nutrient cycling
As well as energy, life requires the availability of certain chemical elements
known as nutrients. These include in particular carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen,
oxygen, phosphorus, sulphur, potassium, calcium, iron and magnesium.
Nutrients cycle through the environment (land, ocean, sediments, and
atmosphere) and ecosystems, and the specific cycle for each nutrient can be
considered separately – the carbon cycle, the nitrogen cycle and so on –
though these may interact in complex ways. Each cycle is a sequence of flows
of a chemical element, in various compounds and forms, between land,
ocean and atmosphere (and plants and animals). The cycles involve biotic
and abiotic (water, land, air) processes and are therefore also referred to as
‘biogeochemical’.
12.- Water circulation and exchange
Water circulation and exchange is vital for productivity in the ocean. Ocean
currents,for instance upwelling, have been shown to be of vital importance
for the high productivity of many fisheries. Another such process is dense
shelf water cascading,a type of marine current driven exclusively by seawater
density contrast (Ivanov et al.2004; Canals et al. 2006; Canals et al. 2009).
Dense water masses flow ‘over the edge’ of the continental shelf into the
deep sea, often using and carving submarine canyons. This margin exchange
process provides an essential exchange between shallow and deep waters
(Heip et al. 2009) and provides ecosystem services (See Box 1).
13. Primary production
Primary production is the formation of biological material through
assimilation or accumulation of energy, nutrients and inorganic carbon by
organisms. The most common way is photosynthesis, while in the deep sea,
in the absence of sunlight, some organisms can utilize chemical energy in the
form of hydrogen, methane, hydrogen sulphide, ammonium and iron to fix
CO2. This is referred to as chemosynthesis, and chemosynthetic bacteria and
archaea use chemical energy for the conversion of inorganic carbon to
biomass. These energy sources occur only in a few places: along mid oceanic
ridges or other tectonically active sites where seawater interacts with magma
or with reactive minerals (Jørgensen and Boetius 2007); on continental
margins, associated with gas hydrates, gas seeps or mud volcanism where
deep subsurface fluids transport chemical energy to the seafloor (Sibuet and
Olu 2002; Levin et al. 2005); associated with large food falls such as whale
carcasse; and in organic rich oxygen minimum zones (Levin et al. 2003).
14.- Resilience
Resilience refers to the ability of a system to maintain key functions and
processes in the face of stresses or pressures by either resisting or adapting
to change.1 There are two components of resilience: the ability to absorb or
resist the impacts of stresses, such as mass bleaching or storms, and the
ability to recover quickly from them. Resilience can be applied to both
ecological systems as well as social systems. In this toolkit, resilience is used
in the context of global climate change; however a resilience-based approach
can be integrated into management of any natural system. Marine
ecosystems are thought generally to have a higher level of resilience than
terrestrial ecosystems. While deep-sea species and habitats have been
thought to be intrinsically more vulnerable and less resilient than their
shallow water counterparts.
15.- Provisioning services
Provisioning services are the products used by humans that are obtained
directly from habitats and ecosystems. In the context of the deep sea, these
include in particular fisheries, oil and gas, waste disposal sites, and chemical
compounds. In most cases, the exploitation of provisioning services involves
a significant input of man-made capital and labour, for example in the form
of fishing boats, oil rigs, and their crews
16.- Fisheries
Fishing fleets have shifted to fishing further offshore and in deeper waters to
meet global demand since the 1960s (Morato et al. 2006, Cochonat et al.
2007) (see Figure 4). Pelagic fisheries include a huge variety of fish species
(tunna), squids and even sharks. In addition the deep sea, despite its limited
primary productivity, is a source of several commercial species. There are
deepwater fisheries for species such as orange roughy, roundnose grenadier,
redfish, oreos and blue ling. A third of shark and ray species spend most of
their life in the deep sea (Morato et al. 2006). In addition there are deep-sea
fisheries for shellfish such as crab and shrimp.
17.- Oil, gas and minerals resources
Oil, gas and minerals under the ocean floor are ecosystem goods created
over geological time periods6. Oil and gas exploration and production are
increasingly taking place in deeper waters, and the pace of oil and gas
exploration and production at depths greater than 300m has accelerated
rapidly in some areas (Large et al. 2003).The marine minerals industry has
seen unprecedented expansion, though this is limited in the deep sea. In
waters deeper than 1000m potential mineral resources include manganese
nodules and cobalt-rich crusts, polymetallic sulphides and phosphorites
18.- Chemical compounds for industrial and pharmaceutical uses
Industry sectors involved in bioprospecting include biotechnology, waste,
agriculture,and the pharmaceutical and cosmetics industries (Cochonat et al.
2007). The uses of marine derived compounds are varied, but the most
exciting potential uses lie in the industrial and medical realms (Glover and
Smith 2003). The majority of marine derived compounds to date have been
obtained from either microorganisms or stationary bottom dwelling
organisms such as corals and sponges
19.- Waste disposal sites
The deep sea is been used for the purposeful or de facto disposal of high
quantities of waste that cannot be disposed of by other means (Maxwell et
al. 2005, Benn et al. forthcoming). For instance, all plastic material disposed
in the sea will not be decomposed but accumulates. The deep sea has been
used as a repository for sewage sludge, dredge spoil and radioactive waste
(McAllister 1988). It has been used as a dumping ground for dangerous
wastes such as munitions and chemical weapons, for example nerve gas
(Thiel 2003; Tyler 2003; Foglini et al. 2010). In addition, there has been
interest in the disposal of large man made objects such as ships and oil rigs
20.- CO2 capture and storage
Capture of CO2 emitted from fossil fuel combustion and storage of CO2 in
the deeper areas of our oceans and in sub-seabed geological formations is
currently envisaged and various techniques have been considered or are
already being tested. These include direct injection into deep seawater;
storage of CO2 as a liquid or a hydrate on the seafloor in water depth below
300m and CO2 injection into geological formations below the seafloor.
21.- Regulating services
Regulating services are the benefits obtained through the natural regulation
of habitats and ecosystem processes such as gas and climate regulation,
natural carbon sequestration and storage, waste absorption and biological
control.
22.- Gas and climate regulation
Gas and climate regulation include in particular the maintenance of the
chemical composition of the atmosphere and oceans. An important
mechanism in this regard is the so-called 'biological pump' (Figure 6), a series
of biologically-mediated processes that transport organic material (hence
carbon and other nutrients) from the ocean surface to deeper layers.
The biological pump recycles nutrients and providing food for deep-dwelling
species. It also plays an important role in the Earth's carbon cycle, carrying
carbon away from the atmosphere and upper ocean layers. Marine
organisms act as a reserve or sink for carbon in living tissue and by facilitating
burial of carbon in seabed sediments. Through this natural carbon
sequestration and storage process, it provides a climate regulation service.
23:- Waste absorption and detoxification
Waste absorption and detoxification are important regulating services as
marine organisms store, bury and transform many waste materials through
assimilation and chemical transformation, either directly or indirectly.
Oceans have a unique (though not infinite) ability to clean up sewage, waste
material and pollutants. In particular, bioturbation − the biogenic mixing of
sediments on the seafloor by burrowing organisms (Solan et al., 2004) − and
accumulation regulate the processes of decomposition and/or sequestration
(e.g. by burial) of organic wastes
24.- Biological control
Biological regulation and control services are the services that result from
interactions between species or genotypes, that is the services linked to
biodiversity itself. They include the trophic-dynamic regulation of populations
(www.coastalwiki.org), biological control of pests, and the supporting
ecosystem services provided by biodiversity that are necessary for the
production of all other –more direct– ecosystem services, including for
instance biodiversity influence on primary production, and nutrient cycling.
An example of biological regulation is viral infection. It plays an important
part in the functioning of the largest ecosystem of the biosphere by
controlling benthic prokaryotic biomass (top down, predatory control)
25, 26, 27- Cultural services
Cultural services are the often non-material benefits people obtain from
habitats and ecosystems through recreation, aesthetic enjoyment,
‘inspiration’ (the material for artistic inspiration, reflection and cognitive
development) and ‘awe’ (whether interpreted as marvel at the emergent
properties of natural processes, or as a sense of ‘spiritual’ wonder).
28:- Among these, what are key functions and processes?
Planet Regulating Ecosystem Functions
- Climate regulation
- Oxygen production (primary production)
- Soil formation
- Evolutionary processes
- Nutrient regeneration
- Marine living resources (fisheries)
29, 30.- Are they unique and how do they differ from those ecosystem
functions and processes in areas within national jurisdiction?
Most of these processes are unique and some of them differ from those
present in areas within national jurisdiction.
Processes are fast at the surface and slower deeper, but because the large
volume of the ocean (and surface area of the seabed) means it is very
important in maintaining biogeochemical cycles on Earth.
Atmosphere properties and characteristic in the high seas as well as depth of
column waters and the influence of the continents are elements that
determine differences between functions and processes from ABNJ and
AWNJ.
Provision of marine living resources in ABNJ is greater than in AWNJ. Most of
them are not overexploited
Climate regulation has been mainly altered by pollution, gas emission and
human activities in AWNJ. In ABNJ the climate change has demonstrated a
slower response
Primary productivity is higher in AWNJ
31.- Do ecosystem functions and processes have a regional or a global scale?
Both. Some examples:
Chemosynthesis – Photosynthesis
Formation of non-fuel mineral resources- Sediment formation
Fisheries- pelagic migration
However due to limits in oceans and atmosphere are not exact in several
processes both scales have place
32.- Are there linkages or interactions between the ecosystems functions
and processes in areas beyond national jurisdiction and within areas of
national jurisdiction?
Of course. Growing evidence of fast track pathways
of terrestrial pollution in the deep sea.
Intercontinental air pollution transport.
Transoceanic resources (migrations)
Maritime trade
Winds and currents are the main responsible of these interactions
33.- Are there significant differences between ecosystem functions and
processes on the seabed and those in the water column?
Chemosynthesis, Petrogenesis and methanogenesis have place in the
bottom. Photosynthesis is exclusive from light zone. All before are primary
production processes
Some functions and processes like sediment formation and mixing,
bioturbation, remineralization only occur in the seabed.
Resuspensión and transport of nutrients occur in both scenes. Organic matter
consumption as well
Trophic interactions in both
Some conditions are different: light, presssure, morphological and
physiological adaptations
Bioturbation and bio-irrigation by benthic organisms are major controls on
the remineralisation of organic matter in the sediment and on the recycling
of many elements.
34.- How do they interact?
The main mechanisms are:
Benthic-pelagic coupling, Food webs, Energy transfer and vertical migrations
The loss of primary production from the pelagic system is a vital segment of
the production budget to clarify.(10) The degree of coupling between the
benthos and the plankton varies across the shelf. Primary production is
highest at the shelf break (Figure 7), but grazer biomass and percent of
production consumed are also relatively high (although still low in absolute
terms). The percent of primary production consumed is lowest over the
middle shelf. This is where one finds higher organic carbon concentrations in
the sediments, and higher benthic biomass. Classifying consumer guilds in
the different shelf domains (Figure 10) reflects differences in benthic-pelagic
coupling. It shows that the guild that utilizes benthic infauna is centered over
the middle shelf, where one finds the highest flux of carbon to the benthos.
The guild that feeds on small pelagic fish is centered over the shelf break and
outer shelf, where their zooplankton prey have the highest biomass.(7)
35, 36:- What are the gaps in our knowledge of these ecosystem functions
and processes?
The main observed gaps are:
i) Understanding the structure and functioning of
marine ecosystems by relating the processes that
shape them to their productivity, diversity and
complexity;
ii) Characterising ecosystem changes (e.g., impacts of
climate change and variability, stability and
resilience) at various temporal and spatial scales;
iii) Evaluating an ecosystem’s capacity to provide
goods and services such as food sources, nutrient
recycling, industrial raw materials and new
biotechnology;
iv) Determining the effects of direct and indirect human
impact on deep-sea biodiversity and ecosystem
functioning;
v) Integrating socio-economic activities into management and governance
strategies to promote
sustainable use of these resources. (Cochonat et al 2007)
37:_ Akcnowledgements
Doalos, UN Funding