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An End-to-End Model Reveals Losers and Winners in a Warming Mediterranean Sea ArchiMer
Moullec, Fabien; Barrier, Nicolas; Drira, Sabrine; Guilhaumon, François; Marsaleix, Patrick; Somot, Samuel; Ulses, Caroline; Velez, Laure; Shin, Yunne-jai.
The Mediterranean Sea is now recognized as a hotspot of global change, ranking among the fastest warming ocean regions. In order to project future plausible scenarios of marine biodiversity at the scale of the whole Mediterranean basin, the current challenge is to develop an explicit representation of the multispecies spatial dynamics under the combined influence of fishing pressure and climate change. Notwithstanding the advanced state-of-the-art modeling of food webs in the region, no previous studies have projected the consequences of climate change on marine ecosystems in an integrated way, considering changes in ocean dynamics, in phyto- and zoo-plankton productions, shifts in Mediterranean species distributions and their trophic interactions at the...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Biodiversity scenario; Climate change; Ecosystem model; End-to-end model; OSMOSE; Fishing; Mediterranean Sea.
Ano: 2019 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00504/61557/65469.pdf
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Building bridges between global information systems on marine organisms and ecosystem models ArchiMer
Gruss, Arnaud; Palomares, Maria L. D.; Poelen, Jorrit H.; Barile, Josephine R.; Aldemita, Casey D.; Ortiz, Shelumiel R.; Barrier, Nicolas; Shin, Yunne-jai; Simons, James; Pauly, Daniel.
To facilitate the wider implementation of ecosystem modeling platforms and, thereby, to help advance ecosystem-based fisheries management (EBFM) worldwide, tools delivering a large quantity of inputs to ecosystem models are needed. We developed a web application providing OSMOSE ecosystem models with values for trophic, growth and reproduction parameters derived from data from two global information systems (FishBase and SeaLifeBase). Our web application guides the user through simple queries to extract information from FishBase and SeaLifeBase data archives, and it delivers all the configuration files necessary for running an OSMOSE model. Here, we present our web application and demonstrate it for the West Florida Shelf ecosystem. Our software...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Web application; FishBase; SeaLifeBase; Ecosystem model; OSMOSE; Web application programming interface.
Ano: 2019 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00489/60109/67182.pdf
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Implementation of an end-to-end model of the Gulf of Lions ecosystem (NW Mediterranean Sea). I. Parameterization, calibration and evaluation ArchiMer
Bănaru, Daniela; Diaz, Fréderic; Verley, Philippe; Campbell, Rose; Navarro, Jonathan; Yohia, Christophe; Oliveros-ramos, Ricardo; Mellon, Capucine; Shin, Yunne-jai.
An end-to-end model named OSMOSE-GoL has been built for the Gulf of Lions, the main French Mediterranean fishing area. This spatialized dynamic model links the coupled hydrodynamic and biogeochemical model Eco3M-S/SYMPHONIE (LTL – low trophic level model) to OSMOSE (HTL – high trophic level model). It includes 15 compartments of living organisms, five from the LTL model (i.e. nanophytoplankton, microphytoplankton, nanozooplankton, microzooplankton and mesozooplankton) and ten from the HTL model (northern krill, southern shortfin squid, European pilchard, European anchovy, European sprat, Atlantic horse mackerel, Atlantic mackerel, blue whiting, European hake and Atlantic bluefin tuna). With the exception of northern krill and European sprat, all HTL...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Ecosystem modeling; Food web; Fisheries; OSMOSE; Eco3M.
Ano: 2019 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00487/59860/65525.pdf
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Relative importance of different mecanisms underlying fish response to climate change ArchiMer
Genu, Mathieu.
Climate change affects marine systems stability, in particular temperature increase induces a shift of the  fish  spatial  distribution  polewards.  Phenology  of  ecological  processes,  such  as  reproduction,  migration  seasons,  and  species  physiology  subject  to  temperature  increase  are  also  expected  to change. The ecosystem response to climate change implying all these processes remains unknown and difficult to estimate due to the numerous interactions between species. To better understand the relative  importance  of  the  different  processes  affected  by  climate  change,  we  use  the  multispecies model OSMOSE applied to the eastern English Channel and we simulated  two climate scenarios for 2040-2049  from    IPCC  (B1  and  A2). ...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Réchauffement océanique; OSMOSE; Processus multiples; Projections du GIEC; Ocean warming; OSMOSE; Multiple processes; IPCC projection.
Ano: 2017 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00643/75513/76367.pdf
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An end-to-end model to evaluate the sensitivity of ecosystem indicators to track fishing impacts ArchiMer
Halouani, Ghassen; Le Loc'H, François; Shin, Yunne-jai; Velez, Laure; Hattab, Tarek; Romdhane, Mohamed Salah; Ben Rais Lasram, Frida.
In order to assist fisheries managers, ecological indicators are needed to evaluate the effects of fishing activities on marine ecosystems and to improve communication of these effects in both public and scientific contexts. Finding appropriate indicators is challenging given the complexity of marine food webs as well as the ecosystem response to fishing pressure. In this study, an end-to-end model developed in the Gulf of Gabes ecosystem (Tunisia) was used to compare the performance of a set of ecosystem indicators in assessing the impact of fishing. This end-to-end model aimed to represent the ecosystem functioning by coupling two existing sub-models, the multispecies individual-based model OSMOSE, representing the dynamics of exploited species and the...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Ecological indicators; OSMOSE; Ecosystem model; End-to-end model; Marine ecosystem; Fishing impacts; Fishery; Gulf of Gabes.
Ano: 2019 URL: https://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00464/57604/60172.pdf
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