Title
Fish debris in sediments from the last 25 kyr in the Humboldt Current reveal the role of productivity and oxygen on small pelagic fishes
Date Issued
2019
Access level
restricted access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Salvatteci, R
Field, D
Ortlieb, L
Caquineau, S
Baumgartner, T
Ferreira, V
Publisher(s)
Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
Upwelling of cold, nutrient-rich water from the oxygen minimum zone (OMZ) off Peru sustains the world's highest production of forage fish, mostly composed of anchovy (Engraulis ringens). However, the potential impacts of climate change on upwelling dynamics and thus fish productivity in the near future are uncertain. Here, we reconstruct past changes in fish populations during the last 25,000 years to unravel their response to changes in OMZ intensity and productivity. We quantified and identified fish scales and bones deposited in laminated sediments from Pisco (Peru) with an average sampling resolution of 20.4 years (±7.1). The records span the Last Glacial Maximum to the recent Holocene and thus encompass a variety of combinations of productivity, oxygen, and global temperature. Our results reveal that productivity appears to be the main factor controlling small pelagic fish abundance, while sub-surface oxygenation affects mainly anchovy and likely sardine populations. Lower productivity and higher oxygen concentrations during the glacial resulted in lower total fish productivity, whereas higher productivity and a stronger OMZ in some time intervals during the Holocene resulted in higher fish abundances. A variety of different conditions between these two oceanographic end members indicate preferred environmental conditions for a variety of small pelagic fishes. There is no evidence in our record for an out of phase relationship between anchovy and sardine at the timescales examined in the present study. Anchovy have been the predominant small pelagic fish throughout the record, at least over centennial to millennial timescales. Its abundance reached a maximum during the Current Warm Period, an era characterized by high productivity and intense OMZ conditions. Thus, industrial fisheries developed during a period of exceptional productivity in relation to that of the last 25 kyr. The records reveal that dramatic decreases in pelagic fish abundances have occurred in response to past large-scale climate changes than those observed in the instrumental period, which suggests that future climate change may result in substantial changes in ecosystem structure. © 2019 Elsevier Ltd
Volume
176
Number
14
Language
English
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85066617188
Source
Progress in Oceanography
ISSN of the container
0079-6611
Sponsor(s)
RS is grateful to the Alexander von Humboldt foundation for granting a postdoctoral fellowship. We acknowledge the Instituto del Mar del Peru (IMARPE) and the joint IMARPE-IRD projects PALEOTRACES and DISCOH for the support of this research. We also acknowledge the program CIENCIACTIVA that granted the research of climate change impacts on the upwelling ecosystem in the frame of the Master's Program in Marine Sciences at the Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia. This study was supported by the German Research Foundation through Sonderforschungsbereich 754 (“Climate-Biogeochemistry Interactions in the Tropical Ocean”). SEM observations were performed at the ALYSES facility (IRD, Sorbonne University, supported by grants from Région Ile-de-France). We deeply thank Bo Thamdrup, chief scientist of the Galathea-3 expedition (Leg 14), and Bente Lomstein, who conducted the core sampling onboard the RV Vaedderen. This paper is dedicated to the memory of Luc Ortlieb and Vicente Ferreira-Bartrina, great scholars, and friends.
Sources of information:
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