Trophic signatures of marine organisms in the Mediterranean as compared with other ecosystems.

Froese, Rainer , Garthe, Stefan, Piatkowski, Uwe and Pauly, Daniel (2005) Trophic signatures of marine organisms in the Mediterranean as compared with other ecosystems. Open Access Belgian Journal of Zoology, 135 (2). pp. 139-143.

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Abstract

We compared several large marine ecosystems in terms of species numbers of fishes, sea birds, marine mammals, and cephalopods. We examined how these numbers were distributed by trophic level, from herbivores to top predators. We created group-specific trophic signatures as plots of number of species by trophic level, and used these to identify similarities and discrepancies between taxonomic groups and ecosystems. Preliminary results suggested that trophic signatures are similar for ecosystems previously known to share major features, and different for dissimilar ecosystems. In the Mediterranean, as well as in the other large marine ecosystems, fish clearly dominate the predatory trophic levels above 3.0. Preliminary signatures for cephalopods, marine mammals, and sea birds in the Mediterranean and in the North Sea indicate that these groups are restricted to trophic levels above 3.0, and are represented by many fewer species than are predatory fish. Notably, cephalopods are the only invertebrates present at higher trophic levels (>= 4). Invertebrates other than cephalopods are restricted to trophic levels below 3, with very few exceptions. Trophic signatures appear to be useful tools for better understanding of the roles that different groups of organisms play in different ecosystems. We also applied free-scale network theory to analyse the food web created by trophic links of fishes. Our preliminary results indicated that Mediterranean fishes are, on average, only two trophic links away from each other.

Document Type: Article
Keywords: Ichthyology; trophic level ; food web ; Mediterranean ; North Sea ; Baltic ; Black Sea ; Caribbean ; South China Sea
Research affiliation: OceanRep > GEOMAR > FB3 Marine Ecology > FB3-EV Marine Evolutionary Ecology
Kiel University
Refereed: Yes
Open Access Journal?: Yes
Publisher: Royal Belgian Zoological Society
Projects: FishBase
Date Deposited: 03 Dec 2008 16:52
Last Modified: 21 Jan 2019 13:31
URI: https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/7395

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