Can we detect changes in Arctic Ecosystems?

Lead Research Organisation: National Oceanography Centre
Department Name: Science and Technology

Abstract

Ecosystems are communities of organisms that interact with each other and their environment. They are often considered in terms of food webs or chains, which describe the interactions between different organisms and their relative hierarchies, known as trophic position. Ocean ecosystems provide key services, such as nutrition, control of climate, support of nutrient cycling and have cultural significance for certain communities. It is thus important that we understand how changes to the environment reshape ecosystems in order to manage climate change impacts.

The Arctic Ocean is already being heavily impacted by climate change. It is warming faster than any other ocean region and as it absorbs fossil fuel emissions, it is gradually acidifying. Arctic sea ice is declining by 10% per decade. This affects the availability of sea ice habitats for organisms from plankton to mammals and modifies the ocean environment. Finally, the Arctic is affected by changes in the magnitude of water movement to and from the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans and composition of these waters. Thus Arctic ecosystems are being impacted by multiple concurrent stressors and must adapt.

To understand how Arctic ecosystems will evolve in response to multiple stressors, it is crucial to evaluate the effects of on going change. Often these questions are tackled by studies that focus on a specific ecosystem in one location and document the various components of the food chain. However the Arctic is diverse, with a wide range of environments that are responding to unique stressors differently. We require a new approach that can provide information on Arctic ecosystems from a pan-Arctic perspective over decadal timescales.

To effectively monitor changes to pan-Arctic ecosystems requires tracers that focus on key ecosystem components and provide quantitative information on ecosystem structure, providing information for management and conservation of ecosystem services. Our goal is to respond to this challenge. We will focus simultaneously on the base of the food chain, controlled by the activity of marine phytoplankton, and key Arctic predators, harp and ringed seals. Seals are excellent candidates to monitor the food web due to their pan-Arctic distribution and foraging behaviour, which means they are exposed to the changing environment.

Nitrogen and carbon stable isotopes are often used to examine ecosystems as they are modified during trophic transfer up the food chain. Hence, they can quantify seal trophic position and food chain length, key determinants of ecosystem structure. Crucial in this context however is the isotope value of the base of the food web, known as the isoscape, which is itself affected by a range of environmental characteristics and fluctuates in space and time. Equally, by virtue of changing migration patterns, seals themselves may feed on similar prey in different isoscapes, which would affect the interpretation of ecosystem structure from stable isotopes. These are the major challenges in using stable isotopes.

We will link stable isotopes to novel tracers of the food web, known as biomarkers. When these tracers are compared against observations of the shifting isoscape and data on seal foraging, they permit seals to be used to monitor the Arctic ecosystem by quantifying their trophic position and overall food chain length. Via a range of observational platforms, our new food web tracers will be mechanistically linked to the spatial and seasonal trends in the Arctic isoscape and seal behaviour. By then combining historical observations from around the Arctic basin with state of the art ocean and seal population modelling, we can quantify past and future changes in Arctic ecosystems. This will provide information on past changes to Arctic ecosystems, but also put in place an approach that can be used to monitor future changes and aid in the management and conservation of ecosystem services.

Planned Impact

The main beneficiaries of this project will be policy makers concerned with conservation of Arctic marine mammals, Inuit communities, school pupils, teachers and the wider general public.

Throughout much of their range, seals and other mammals are important cultural and nutritional resources for indigenous and non-indigenous communities. However, seals are being measurably impacted by climate change. Our project will provide observational and modelling evidence regarding the drivers of alterations to seals' trophic position, food web structure or foraging behaviour over decadal time scales. Using multiple tools, we will delineate if changes in seal trophic position, food chain length or foraging behaviour are due to environmental factors (e.g. sea ice changes), variations in the base of the food web (e.g. from reduced nutrient supply) or the addition of new trophic levels (e.g. migration of boreal species). Our work directly benefits ongoing programmes that monitor the Arctic, such as the Five-year Science Research Agenda from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (Canada). Our work will benefit work by DFO and aid Inuit communities develop adaptation strategies (Letter of Support from Ferguson, DFO). We will disseminate results from our project to key international organisations, such as the International Council for Exploration of the Seas (ICES) and North Atlantic Marine Mammal Commission (NAMMCO), facilitated by NAMMCO General Secretary and project partner, Desportes. Other project partners (Stenson, Hammill, Ferguson and Hop) are also involved in ICES and NAMMCO, as well as the Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Programme (CBMP), making them able to disseminate our results in the context of management and policy. A one year PDRA will collate, analyse and model historical data on harp and ringed seal body condition and fecundity alongside environmental variables and determine the factors driving long term change in seal populations, disseminating their findings to ICES and NAMMCO at international meetings. This will allow the practical and applied project outputs to inform management and policy for marine mammals in the Arctic, with the potential to affect future decision making for seal populations. Thus, we directly address NERC strategy by providing tools for the 'Management of Environmental Change'.

It is essential that our research outcomes are disseminated to the UK community. This is challenging but vital to recruit students into sciences, convince the public that it is worthwhile funding this type of research and increase awareness of the sensitivity of the Arctic to a changing climate. Our project will provide teachers with tools to demonstrate key concepts in our research programme. To this end, we will produce three posters to convey for example, 'Arctic food webs', 'Stable isotopes in Arctic ecology' and 'Impact of climate change on the Arctic' to school pupils in order to demonstrate how food webs operate in the Arctic. Posters will be hand-drawn by a visual artist with experience of communicating complex ideas concisely and digitized by co-PI Heath.

The general public tends to engage with popular wild life television programmes that illustrate the fauna of the Arctic and the pressures imposed by climate change. We will explain the vital role of microscopic phytoplankton and nutrients within the environment by creating one short accessible scored video, with combinations of film, hand and digital animations with commentaries aimed at the general public. The video will be distributed via a project YouTube channel and via our own website.

At the programme level we suggest (a) creating a dedicated programme website and social media outlets, (b) soliciting the BBC or Discovery Channel to produce a short documentary about the programme and (c) hiring an expert in science communication and impact to represent the programme and/or train members of the research programme in science communication.
 
Description (1) Phytoplankton uptake depletes nitrate in the Barents Sea euphotic zone and new production is connected to Atlantic Water supply. There is no evidence for benthic denitrification imparting a signature on pelagic nitrate in the Barents Sea. Atlantification may decrease productivity in the Barents Sea
(2) During the summer in the Fram Strait, particulate nitrogen isotopes values in Polar Surface Water (PSW) are higher than in Atlantic orgin water, reflecting an Arctic source of nitrate and more complete utilisation. Our findings demonstrate greater nitrogen utilisation and limitation in the PSW driven by salinity stratification and a low nitrate supply from the Arctic. In Atlantic Water, a less stratified water column, a shallower nitracline and silicate limitation may impede full uptake of nitrate. We suggest that warming of the Arctic over the forthcoming decades may further exacerbate these differences with local and far-field effects involving altered nitrogen isotope signals, phytoplankton composition and the exchange of nutrients through the Fram Strait.
(3) Analysis of harp seal tissue for Atlantic- and Pacific-influenced regions of the Arctic Ocean reveal that the spatial trends in the baseline, influenced by water mass characteristics, are propagated up the food web. Caution needs to be taken when interpreting food webs from different regions of the Arctic and assignment of a predators' trophic position when the baseline is changing.
(4) Temporal trends in isotopes in harp seal teeth reveal that the baseline has been altered in the Atlantic and Pacific sectors of the Arctic due to change in oceanographic conditions. The trophic position of seals has only been altered in the high Arctic and not the lower Arctic region, likely due to borealisation of the high Arctic.
(5) Subsurfce jets of warm water are injected into the interior of the Arctic Ocean with the potential to melt sea ice above and also to inject new nutrients into the sunlit surface waters and stimulate phytoplankton gorwth
Exploitation Route These findings will help inform and test future projections of Arctic change and the impact on the ecosystem
Sectors Environment

 
Description Nitrogen fixation in the Arctic Ocean
Amount £733,137 (GBP)
Funding ID NE/T001240/1 
Organisation Natural Environment Research Council 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 02/2021 
End 07/2023
 
Title JR16006 CTD Data 
Description Fully processed CTD data from cruise JR16006 to the Barents Sea 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2019 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Used in CAO publications - papers still in review 
URL https://www.bodc.ac.uk/data/published_data_library/catalogue/10.5285/89a3a6b8-7223-0b9c-e053-6c86abc...
 
Title JR16006 VMADCP data 
Description Vessel Mounted ADCP data from cruise JR16006 to the Barents Sea (horizontal current velocities, depth resolved) Hopkins J.(2019). Vessel Mounted Acoustic Doppler Current Profiler (VMADCP) data from NERC Changing Arctic Ocean Cruise JR16006 on the RRS James Clark Ross, July 2017. British Oceanographic Data Centre, National Oceanography Centre, NERC, UK. doi:10/dg53. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2019 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Publication submitted to a Special Issue in Philosophical Transactions A 
 
Title JR17005 CTD data 
Description Hopkins J.; Brennan D.; Abell R.; Sanders R.W.; Mountifield D.(2018). CTD data from NERC Changing Arctic Ocean Cruise JR17005 on the RRS James Clark Ross, May-June 2018. British Oceanographic Data Centre - Natural Environment Research Council, UK. doi:10/cspz. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Core physics database in support of the whole CAO programme (16 projects) 
URL https://www.bodc.ac.uk/data/published_data_library/catalogue/10.5285/726f6dc8-cebf-427d-e053-6c86abc...
 
Title JR17005 Ships Underway Data 
Description Ships underway measurements of sea surface ocean variables and meterology collected during May-June 2018 as part of ARISE, Changing Arctic Ocean cruise JR17005 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2020 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact This data set is freely available for use by the CAO community and its partners. 
URL https://www.bodc.ac.uk/data/published_data_library/catalogue/10.5285/a0817374-6342-51bf-e053-6c86abc...
 
Description Collaboration with Jen Mackinnon (Scripps) 
Organisation University of California, San Diego (UCSD)
Department Scripps Institution of Oceanography
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution A member of our team was granted a berth on the SODA research cruise to the Beaufort Sea (led by Jen Mackinnon) to facilitiate collection of nutrient samples. We are now working with the SODA project to help understand the biogeochemical significance of their work.
Collaborator Contribution A member of our team was granted a berth on the SODA research cruise to the Beaufort Sea (led by Jen Mackinnon) to facilitiate collection of nutrient samples.
Impact Papers are in preparation and an oral presentation was given at Ocean Science 2020. Subduction of Pacific Summer Water into sub-surface eddies; coordinated observations from late summer 2018. J. Mackinnon and 17 co-authors
Start Year 2018
 
Description Stanford University (Arctic Primary Productivty data) 
Organisation Stanford University
Country United States 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Expertise in measuring vertical nutrient fluxes which can be used to make estimates of productivity
Collaborator Contribution Access to a model and remote sensing based estimate of (surface) primary production in the Arctic. Re-processing of this data set up until the end of the CAO observational period.
Impact Too early for direct outcomes
Start Year 2017
 
Description Cruise report for the UK Challenger Marine Society 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Informal blog describing the aims of the cruise and the activities that took place onboard. Designed to be easily accessible and to promote Arctic research. The coordinator reported the blog to have had one of the highest hit rates (> 100 reads).
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
URL https://challengercaptainsblog.wordpress.com/2018/01/01/a-summer-spent-in-the-changing-arctic-ocean/
 
Description Ice Worlds Event linked to RRS Sir David Attenborough naming ceremony (Liverpool) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact The ARISE team put together an interactive display during a 3 day event held at Birkenhead, Liverpool (26-28 Sep 2019) to mark the naming of the RRS Sir David Attenborough. Hundreds of people attended this ticketed event, including parties from local schools. Children (and adults) learned about Arctic seals, how we track them and learn about their behaviour and how climate change is affecting them.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://www.bas.ac.uk/media-post/rrs-sir-david-attenborough-naming-ceremony-tickets-available/
 
Description Imperial College Seminar (2018) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Regional
Primary Audience Undergraduate students
Results and Impact Seminar on the Changing Arctic Ocean at Imperial College London in the Faculty of Engineering, Department of Earth Science & Engineering
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
 
Description Interview and on-line video with BBC Radio Solent for the first Chnaging Arctic Ocean cruise, JR16006 
Form Of Engagement Activity A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press)
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Jo Hopkins was interviewed and filmed by a BBC Radio Solent news reporter onboard the RRS James Clark Ross just before the ship sailed for the first Changing Arctic Ocean research cruise. She explained the goals of the ARISE project and the wider Arctic programme and explained how many of the measurements would be made during the cruise. The Interview was broadcoast on the 29th June 2017 on the Julian Clegg show and the video posted on the BBC Radio Solent Facebook page.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
URL https://www.facebook.com/BBCRadioSolent/videos/1381007702019321/
 
Description Participation in I'm A Scientist Stay At Home online, student-led STEM enrichment activity (June-July 2020) 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact Since 2010, "I'm A Scientist, Get Me Out Of Here" has run an annual fortnight of online outreach events in which school students from around the UK chat with scientists. During lockdown across the UK in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, an expanded programme of "I'm A Scientist, Stay At Home" took place between May-July 2020. The format for these events was primarily online chat sessions - sometimes themed, sometimes completely open - in which students and scientists were brought together to pose and answer questions. In addition, the website hosts "Ask A Scientist", allowing questions to be posted for everyone in the community to answer.

Andrew Yool (NOC, Southampton) joined the coding, environment and "Summer 2020" zones of the event, and took part in a number of chatroom sessions. In these, around 10-15 scientists interacted with up to 30 students, answering questions on their specialisms (in this case marine biogeochemistry, Arctic science and computer modelling), as well as questions on why people became scientists, what it's like to be a scientist day-to-day, and how students can make science their career.

This activity was written up for the UKESM newsletter, https://ukesm.ac.uk/ukesm-newsletter-no-11-july-2020/.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://imascientist.org.uk/
 
Description School visit and story telling (Aviles, Spain) 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach Local
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact Slide show and story telling about the Arctic to approx. 20 infant school aged pupils. The children asked lots of questions about polar bears!
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019