Pelagic Ecology Research Group, Gatty Marine Laboratory, Scottish Oceans Institute, University of St Andrews, East Sands, St Andrews KY16 8LB, Scotland, UK.
Australian Antarctic Division, 203 Channel Highway, Kingston, TAS 7050, Australia.
Curr Biol. 2017 Jan 9;27(1):113-119. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2016.11.003. Epub 2016 Dec 22.
The global ocean's near surface can be partitioned into distinct provinces on the basis of regional primary productivity and oceanography [1]. This ecological geography provides a valuable framework for understanding spatial variability in ecosystem function but has relevance only partway into the epipelagic zone (the top 200 m). The mesopelagic (200-1,000 m) makes up approximately 20% of the global ocean volume, plays important roles in biogeochemical cycling [2], and holds potentially huge fish resources [3-5]. It is, however, hidden from satellite observation, and a lack of globally consistent data has prevented development of a global-scale understanding. Acoustic deep scattering layers (DSLs) are prominent features of the mesopelagic. These vertically narrow (tens to hundreds of m) but horizontally extensive (continuous for tens to thousands of km) layers comprise fish and zooplankton and are readily detectable using echosounders. We have compiled a database of DSL characteristics globally. We show that DSL depth and acoustic backscattering intensity (a measure of biomass) can be modeled accurately using just surface primary productivity, temperature, and wind stress. Spatial variability in these environmental factors leads to a natural partition of the mesopelagic into ten distinct classes. These classes demark a more complex biogeography than the latitudinally banded schemes proposed before [6, 7]. Knowledge of how environmental factors influence the mesopelagic enables future change to be explored: we predict that by 2100 there will be widespread homogenization of mesopelagic communities and that mesopelagic biomass could increase by approximately 17%. The biomass increase requires increased trophic efficiency, which could arise because of ocean warming and DSL shallowing.
全球海洋近表层可根据区域初级生产力和海洋学特征分为不同的海域[1]。这种生态地理学为理解生态系统功能的空间变异性提供了一个有价值的框架,但仅适用于上层带(上层 200 米)的一部分。中层带(200-1000 米)约占全球海洋体积的 20%,在生物地球化学循环中发挥着重要作用[2],并拥有潜在的巨大鱼类资源[3-5]。然而,中层带深处于卫星观测范围之外,且缺乏全球一致的数据,阻碍了对其建立全球性的理解。声学深海散射层(DSL)是中层带的显著特征。这些垂直狭窄(几十到几百米)但水平延伸(连续数千公里)的层包含鱼类和浮游动物,很容易用回声探测器探测到。我们已经在全球范围内编制了 DSL 特征数据库。我们表明,仅使用表层初级生产力、温度和风应力,就可以准确地模拟 DSL 深度和声学反向散射强度(生物量的一种衡量标准)。这些环境因素的空间变异性导致中层带自然分为十个不同的类别。这些类别比以前提出的按纬度划分的方案更能说明复杂的生物地理学[6,7]。了解环境因素如何影响中层带,可以探索未来的变化:我们预测,到 2100 年,中层带的生物群落将广泛同质化,并且中层带的生物量可能会增加约 17%。这种生物量的增加需要更高的营养效率,这可能是由于海洋变暖和 DSL 变浅导致的。