scholarly journals Protecting the North Sea: New research for biodiversity recovery.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oceana ◽  
Helena Álvarez ◽  
Allison L. Perry ◽  
Jorge Blanco ◽  
Silvia Garcia ◽  
...  

To help fill gaps in knowledge about marine biodiversity in the North Sea, Oceana carried out two eight week research expeditions, in 2016 and 2017. Oceana’s surveys documented a wide range of habitats and species that are considered priorities for conservation, under national, EU, and international frameworks that recognise them as threatened and/or establish legal requirements for their protection.Oceana’s research has underscored the fact that much remains to be discovered about marine life on the seabed of the North Sea. Continued research is critical for informing efforts to recover biodiversity, an urgent priority in the face of the multiple, intense pressures facing the North Sea’s marine habitats and species.

2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (6) ◽  
pp. 1419-1444 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. Ford ◽  
Johan van der Molen ◽  
Kieran Hyder ◽  
John Bacon ◽  
Rosa Barciela ◽  
...  

Abstract. Phytoplankton form the base of the marine food chain, and knowledge of phytoplankton community structure is fundamental when assessing marine biodiversity. Policy makers and other users require information on marine biodiversity and other aspects of the marine environment for the North Sea, a highly productive European shelf sea. This information must come from a combination of observations and models, but currently the coastal ocean is greatly under-sampled for phytoplankton data, and outputs of phytoplankton community structure from models are therefore not yet frequently validated. This study presents a novel set of in situ observations of phytoplankton community structure for the North Sea using accessory pigment analysis. The observations allow a good understanding of the patterns of surface phytoplankton biomass and community structure in the North Sea for the observed months of August 2010 and 2011. Two physical–biogeochemical ocean models, the biogeochemical components of which are different variants of the widely used European Regional Seas Ecosystem Model (ERSEM), were then validated against these and other observations. Both models were a good match for sea surface temperature observations, and a reasonable match for remotely sensed ocean colour observations. However, the two models displayed very different phytoplankton community structures, with one better matching the in situ observations than the other. Nonetheless, both models shared some similarities with the observations in terms of spatial features and inter-annual variability. An initial comparison of the formulations and parameterizations of the two models suggests that diversity between the parameter settings of model phytoplankton functional types, along with formulations which promote a greater sensitivity to changes in light and nutrients, is key to capturing the observed phytoplankton community structure. These findings will help inform future model development, which should be coupled with detailed validation studies, in order to help facilitate the wider application of marine biogeochemical modelling to user and policy needs.


Ocean Science ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 315-335 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Marsh ◽  
Ivan D. Haigh ◽  
Stuart A. Cunningham ◽  
Mark E. Inall ◽  
Marie Porter ◽  
...  

Abstract. The European Slope Current provides a shelf-edge conduit for Atlantic Water, a substantial fraction of which is destined for the northern North Sea, with implications for regional hydrography and ecosystems. Drifters drogued at 50 m in the European Slope Current at the Hebridean shelf break follow a wide range of pathways, indicating highly variable Atlantic inflow to the North Sea. Slope Current pathways, timescales and transports over 1988–2007 are further quantified in an eddy-resolving ocean model hindcast. Particle trajectories calculated with model currents indicate that Slope Current water is largely recruited from the eastern subpolar North Atlantic. Observations of absolute dynamic topography and climatological density support theoretical expectations that Slope Current transport is to first order associated with meridional density gradients in the eastern subpolar gyre, which support a geostrophic inflow towards the slope. In the model hindcast, Slope Current transport variability is dominated by abrupt 25–50 % reductions of these density gradients over 1996–1998. Concurrent changes in wind forcing, expressed in terms of density gradients, act in the same sense to reduce Slope Current transport. This indicates that coordinated regional changes of buoyancy and wind forcing acted together to reduce Slope Current transport during the 1990s. Particle trajectories further show that 10–40 % of Slope Current water is destined for the northern North Sea within 6 months of passing to the west of Scotland, with a general decline in this percentage over 1988–2007. Salinities in the Slope Current correspondingly decreased, evidenced in ocean analysis data. Further to the north, in the Atlantic Water conveyed by the Slope Current through the Faroe–Shetland Channel (FSC), salinity is observed to increase over this period while declining in the hindcast. The observed trend may have broadly compensated for a decline in the Atlantic inflow, limiting salinity changes in the northern North Sea during this period. Proxies for both Slope Current transport and Atlantic inflow to the North Sea are sought in sea level height differences across the FSC and between Shetland and the Scottish mainland (Wick). Variability of Slope Current transport on a wide range of timescales, from seasonal to multi-decadal, is implicit in sea level differences between Lerwick (Shetland) and Tórshavn (Faroes), in both tide gauge records from 1957 and a longer model hindcast spanning 1958–2012. Wick–Lerwick sea level differences in tide gauge records from 1965 indicate considerable decadal variability in the Fair Isle Current transport that dominates Atlantic inflow to the northwest North Sea, while sea level differences in the hindcast are dominated by strong seasonal variability. Uncertainties in the Wick tide gauge record limit confidence in this proxy.


Clay Minerals ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-186 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Wilkinson ◽  
R. S. Haszeldine ◽  
A. E. Fallick

AbstractThe principal clays of the northern and central North Sea are illite (sometimes with interlayered smectite) and kaolin. Chlorite is only locally important. Although it has been proposed that kaolin within North Sea sandstones is detrital in origin, the majority of workers have concluded that it is authigenic, largely the product of feldspar alteration. Kaolin is found within a wide range of sedimentary settings (and within shales) apparently defying the notion that kaolin is an indicator of meteoric water deposition. Within sandstones, the earliest authigenic kaolin has a vermiform morphology, the distribution of which is controlled by the availability of detrital mica to act as a nucleus, and the composition of the post-depositional porewaters. This vermiform kaolin formed in meteoric water, the presence of which is easily accounted for below sub-aerial exposure surfaces in non-marine formations, and below unconformities over marine units. In fully marine sands, and even marine shale units, kaolin still occurs. It has therefore been suggested that even these locations have been flushed with meteoric water.Early vermiform kaolin recrystallizes to a more blocky morphology as burial proceeds, at least in the Brent Group. Blocky kaolin has been reported as growing before, synchronously with, and after the formation of quartz overgrowths, though oxygen isotope studies support low-temperature growth, pre-quartz. Blocky kaolin may form during meteoric flushing associated with lower Cretaceous uplift and erosion, though it is found in fault blocks that are thought to have remained below sea level. Here, the kaolin may form in stagnant meteoric water, relics of the post-depositional porewater. It has also been proposed that the blocky kaolin grew in ascending basinal waters charged with carboxylic acids and CO2, though this hypothesis is not supported by stable oxygen isotope data. Some of the blocky kaolin is dickite, the stable polymorph above ∼100°C.Fibrous illite occurs almost ubiquitously within the clastic sediments of the North Sea. An early pore-lining phase has been interpreted as both infiltrated clastic clay, and as an early diagenetic phase. Early clays may have been quite smectite-rich illites, or even discrete smectites. Later, fibrous illite is undoubtedly neoformed, and can degrade reservoir quality significantly. Both within sandstones and shales, there is an apparent increase in the K content deeper than 4 km of burial, which could be due to dilution of the early smectite-rich phase by new growth illite, or to the progressive illitization of existing I-S. Much of the ‘illite’ that has been dated by the K-Ar method may therefore actually be I-S.The factors that control the formation of fibrous illite are only poorly known, though temperature must play a role. Illite growth has been proposed for almost the entire range of diagenetic temperatures (e.g. 15–20°C, Brent Group; 35–40°C, Oxfordian Sand, Inner Moray Firth; 50–90°C, Brae formation; 100–110°C, Brent Group; 130–140°C, Haltenbanken). It seems unlikely that there is a threshold temperature below which illite growth is impossible (or too slow to be significant), though this is a recurring hypothesis in the literature. Instead, illite growth seems to be an event, commonly triggered by oil emplacement or another change in the physiochemical conditions within the sandstone, such as an episode of overpressure release. Hence fibrous illite can grow at any temperature encountered during diagenesis.Although there is an extensive dataset of K-Ar ages of authigenic illites from the Jurassic of the North Sea, there is no consensus as to whether the data are meaningful, or whether the purified illite samples prepared for analysis are so contaminated with detrital phases as to render the age data meaningless. At present it is unclear about how to resolve this problem, though there is some indication that chemical micro-analysis could help. It is a common belief that illite ages record the timing of oil charge, and so can be used to calibrate basin models.Grain-coating Fe-rich chlorite cements can preserve exceptional porosity during burial. They are found in marginal marine sandstones, formed during diagenesis from precursor Fe-rich clays such as berthierine or verdine.


Author(s):  
S.F. Rainer

Descriptions of the polychaete Nephtys hombergii Savigny, 1818 have encompassed a wide range of apparently intraspecific variation in taxonomic features such as the segment on which interramal cirri first occur, and the form and size of pre- and postsetal lamellae (Fauchald, 1963; Woolf, 1968; Hartmann-Schröder, 1971). During the examination of museum collections and of extensive ecological collections from the North Sea (Rainer, 1990) and from Danish waters, it was found that the name N. hombergii has been applied to three morphologically similar species, viz. N. hombergii (s.s.), N. assimilis Örsted and N. kersivalensis Mclntosh. Both are locally abundant species that may occur with N. hombergii. This paper designates a neotype of N. assimilis, provides a full description of N. assimilis and N. kersivalensis, and removes these species from synonymy with N. hombergii.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johannes Hamre

The ecosystems with their relationships between fish species and stocks, have been established by evolution for millions of years, but during the last 50 years, the ecosystems in the North Sea and along the Norwegian coast have been changed fundamentally by fisheries. The North Sea mackerel stock has been depleted and its feeding grounds have been invaded by the Western mackerel which spawns west of Ireland. This stock is now very rich in numbers and occupies the North Sea, the Norwegian Sea and the western Barents Sea. If the trend continues, mackerel may outcompete many of the other fish stocks in the area. Traditionally and until the beginning of the 1970s, there was a large stock of sandeel spawning in the North Sea and on the Norwegian coast. Sandeel juveniles was an important food source for a wide range of species, including sea mammals and birds. The fact that this stock has also been overfished, may explain many changes observed in the ecosystem on the west coast of Norway, for example a large reduction in the populations of sea birds. There are several instances where ecosystems shift to sustain jellyfish blooms in response to depletion of forage fish stocks. This was registered in Namibia in the 1990’s, where the pilchard stock was decimated and the biomass of jellyfish soon became overwhelming. On the west-coast of Norway, there are now frequent blooms of jellyfish, yet another indication that a controlling factor is missing in the system, in this case sandeel, which is a key species in the transfer of nutrients from zooplankton to higher trophic levels in the area. In this paper, I give a description of the situation and some suggested measures that should be taken in fisheries management.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert J. Wilson ◽  
Douglas C. Speirs ◽  
Alessandro Sabatino ◽  
Michael R. Heath

Abstract. Seabed sediment mapping is important for a wide range of marine policy, planning and scientific issues, and there has been considerable national and international investment around the world in the collation and synthesis of sediment data sets. However, in Europe at least, much of this effort has been directed towards seabed classification and mapping of discrete habitats. Scientific users often have to resort to reverse-engineering these classifications to recover continuous variables such as mud content and median grain size that are required for many ecological and biophysical studies. Here we present a new set of 0.125 by 0.125° resolution synthetic maps of continuous properties of the northwest European sedimentary environment, extending from the Bay of Biscay to the northern limits of the North Sea and the Faroe Islands. The maps are a blend of gridded survey data, and statistically modelled values based on distributions of bed shear stress due to tidal currents and waves, and bathymetric properties. Recent work has shown that statistical models can predict sediment composition in British waters and the North Sea with high accuracy, and here we extend this to the entire shelf and to the mapping of other key seabed parameters. The maps include percentage compositions of mud, sand and gravel; porosity and permeability; median grain size of the whole-sediment and of the sand and the gravel fractions; carbon and nitrogen content of sediments; percentage of seabed area covered by rock; mean and maximum depth-averaged tidal velocity and wave-orbital velocity at the seabed; and mean monthly natural disturbance rates. A number of applications for these maps exist, including species distribution modelling and the more accurate representation of seafloor biogeochemistry in ecosystem models. The data products are available from doi:10.15129/07bc686e-a354-40de-8c08-372ced7aad64.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oceana ◽  
Silvia Garcia ◽  
Allison L. Perry ◽  
Jorge Blanco ◽  
Helena Álvarez ◽  
...  

The waters off Holderness, north of the Humber Estuary on the Yorkshire coast, represent a very rich area in terms of marine biodiversity. This is partly due to the mosaic of substrate types found in the area, which range from rocky bottoms and coarse sediment through to mixed sediment, sand, and mud. This array of substrates supports, in turn, a wide range of benthic species, both sessile and mobile, including those that live on the surface of coarse sediments and infauna that live within softer sediments. To help advance marine conservation and management in the area of Holderness, Oceana carried out research surveys in 2016, which focused mainly on animal life on the seabed (Box 1). Surveys were conducted both inside protected areas (Flamborough Headand Holderness Inshore) and outside protected areas: in the waters of Holderness Offshore (which at the time had been recommended but not proposed for protection) and in the still-unprotected corridor between Holderness Inshore and Holderness Offshore. The main objective of this research was to gather additional data to support the designation of Holderness Offshore, given what was already known about the ecological importance of the Holderness area.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oceana ◽  
Helena Álvarez ◽  
Allison L. Perry ◽  
Jorge Blanco ◽  
Cecilie Petersen ◽  
...  

Cleaver Bank represents the largest area of hard substrate in the Dutch North Sea, and its biodiversity importance has been repeatedly recognised. The combination of oceanographic and geological patterns found in the area (e.g., depth, low currents and light penetration) makes Cleaver Bank a unique enclave of marine life in the Dutch EEZ. Thus, it has already been designated under various figures of protection (see Box 4). However, current management measures for these areas fail to secure the preservation of the area’s fragile combination of features. Bearing in mind that the disappearance of the former rocky banks in Dutch waters was caused by their direct removal in bottom trawls, and the threat that fishing activities pose to the fragile and varied seabed of Cleaver Bank, Oceana proposes that the entire area of Klaverbank SAC should be closed to all type of bottom-contacting gears. Continued bottom-contact fishing in Klaverbankrepresents a clear threat to the fragile benthic ecosystems found in the area. On the UK side, Oceana’s findings have further confirmed that Cleaver Bank as a whole (both the Dutch and UK sides) is characterised by very similar habitats and communities. Oceana urges the UK government to carry out more detailed habitat mapping, in order to better identify the range of features present, and determine which conservation and management measures are needed to preserve and restore the ecological integrity of Cleaver Bank.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oceana ◽  
Silvia Garcia ◽  
Allison L. Perry ◽  
Jorge Blanco ◽  
Cecilie Petersen ◽  
...  

The northern waters of the Danish North Sea encompass a wide range of depths, reaching down to 480 m in the region of the Skagerrak. The area is home to a rich diversity of seabed habitats and associated species, including those that are priorities for marine conservation at EU and international levels. As a result, eight marine protected areas (MPAs) have been designated with the aim of protecting habitats such as reefs, bubbling reefs, and sandbanks, as well as harbour porpoise. However, the poor condition of protected habitats within these areas indicates that current protection is insufficient, and recent assessments of the Danish MPA network have revealed key gaps in coverage in the North Sea that must be addressed, particularly in offshore areas. On the basis of its findings, Oceana recommends the designation or enlargement of MPAs to safeguard these valuable features in specific areas, and the formal protection of priority features that occur within existing MPAs but which are not currently protected by those sites. Critically, given the intensity of human pressure in the Danish North Sea, designated MPAs must be effectively managed if they are to achieve their intended conservation aims.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edgar Bernier ◽  
Sebastien Perrier

Abstract Maximizing operational efficiency is a critical challenge in oil and gas production, particularly important for mature assets in the North Sea. The causes of production shortfalls are numerous, distributed across a wide range of disciplines, technical and non-technical causes. The primary reason to apply Natural Language Processing (NLP) and text mining on several years of shortfall history was the need to support efficiently the evaluation of digital transformation use-case screenings and value mapping exercises, through a proper mapping of the issues faced. Obviously, this mapping contributed as well to reflect on operational surveillance and maintenance strategies to reduce the production shortfalls. This paper presents a methodology where the historical records of descriptions, comments and results of investigation regarding production shortfalls are revisited, adding to existing shortfall classifications and statistics, in particular in two domains: richer first root-cause mapping, and a series of advanced visualizations and analytics. The methodology put in place uses natural-language pre-processing techniques, combined with keyword-based text-mining and classification techniques. The limitations associated to the size and quality of these language datasets will be described, and the results discussed, highlighting the value of reaching high level of data granularity while defeating the ‘more information, less attention’ bias. At the same time, visual designs are introduced to display efficiently the different dimensions of this data (impact, frequency evolution through time, location in term of field and affected systems, root causes and other cause-related categories). The ambition in the domain of visualization is to create User Experience-friendly shortfall analytics, that can be displayed in smart rooms and collaborative rooms, where display's efficiency is higher when user-interactions are kept minimal, number of charts is limited and multiple dimensions do not collide. The paper is based on several applications across the North Sea. This case study and the associated lessons learned regarding natural language processing and text mining applied to similar technical concise data are answering several frequently asked questions on the value of the textual data records gathered over years.


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