burdwood bank
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2020 ◽  
Vol 655 ◽  
pp. 1-27
Author(s):  
L Riccialdelli ◽  
YA Becker ◽  
NE Fioramonti ◽  
M Torres ◽  
DO Bruno ◽  
...  

Understanding the structure and functioning of marine ecosystems has become a critical issue to assess the potential short- and long-term effects of natural and anthropogenic impacts and to determine the knowledge needed to conduct appropriate conservation actions. This goal can be achieved in part by acquiring more detailed food web information and evaluating the processes that shape food web structure and dynamics. Our main objective was to identify large-scale patterns in the organization of pelagic food webs that can be linked to a wasp-waist (WW) structure, proposed for the southwestern South Atlantic Ocean. We evaluated 3 sub-Antarctic marine areas in a regional context: the Beagle Channel (BC), the Atlantic coast of Tierra del Fuego (CA) and the oceanic Burdwood Bank area (BB). We used carbon and nitrogen isotopic information of all functional trophic groups, ranging from primary producers to top predators, and analyzed them through stable isotope-based Bayesian analyses. We found that BC and BB have a more pronounced WW structure compared to CA. We identified species at mid to low trophic positions that play a key role in the trophodynamics of each marine area (e.g. Fuegian sprat Sprattus fuegensis, longtail southern cod Patagonotothen ramsayi and squat lobster Munida gregaria) and considered them as the most plausible WW species. The identification of the most influential species within food webs has become a crucial task for conservation purposes in local and regional contexts to maintain ecosystem integrity and the supply of ecosystem services for the southwestern South Atlantic Ocean.


Zootaxa ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4878 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-239
Author(s):  
L. SCHEJTER ◽  
G. GENZANO ◽  
C.D. PÉREZ ◽  
F. ACUÑA ◽  
R.T.S. CORDEIRO ◽  
...  

In this study we provide an updated checklist of benthic Cnidaria from SW Atlantic Ocean that comprised the Marine Protected Areas Namuncurá I and II, located at Burdwood bank, and other neighbouring locations. A total of 88 taxa was recorded: 36 hydrozoans and 52 anthozoans from which 32 were octocorals, 10 scleractinian corals, 8 sea anemones and 2 zoanthids. Burdwood bank presented the highest richness considering that 87% of the recorded species inhabit this plateau or its slope. Besides some common species widely distributed in the studied sub-areas, at least 24 species represent new distributional records while few were exclusively recorded at Burdwood bank. The inventory here provided will help to identify key habitat-forming species in a complex habitat where marine animal forests and vulnerable marine ecosystems were previously detected. It will be also a very valuable tool for the management and monitoring of the sub-areas under protection.


2020 ◽  
Vol 651 ◽  
pp. 163-181
Author(s):  
AS Bonnet-Lebrun ◽  
P Catry ◽  
TJ Clark ◽  
L Campioni ◽  
A Kuepfer ◽  
...  

Pelagic seabirds are important components of many marine ecosystems. The most abundant species are medium/small sized petrels (<1100 g), yet the sub-mesoscale (<10 km) distribution, habitat use and foraging behaviour of this group are not well understood. Sooty shearwaters Ardenna grisea are among the world’s most numerous pelagic seabirds. The majority inhabit the Pacific, where they have declined, partly due to bycatch and other anthropogenic impacts, but they are increasing in the Atlantic. To evaluate the sub-mesoscale habitat preferences (i.e. the disproportionality between habitat use and availability), diving behaviour and bycatch risk of Atlantic breeders, we tracked sooty shearwaters from the Falkland Islands during late incubation and early chick-rearing with GPS loggers (n = 20), geolocators (n = 10) and time-depth recorders (n = 10). These birds foraged exclusively in neritic and shelf-break waters, principally over the Burdwood Bank, ~350 km from their colony. Like New Zealand breeders, they dived mostly during daylight, especially at dawn and dusk, consistent with the exploitation of vertically migrating prey. However, Falkland birds made shorter foraging trips, shallower dives, and did not forage in oceanic waters. Their overlap with fisheries was low, and they foraged at shallower depths than those targeted by trawlers, the most frequent fishing vessels encountered, indicating that bycatch risk was low during late incubation/early chick-rearing. Although our results should be treated with caution, they indicate that Atlantic and Pacific sooty shearwaters may experience markedly differing pressures at sea. Comparative study between these populations, e.g. combining biologging and demography, is therefore warranted.


2020 ◽  
Vol 210 ◽  
pp. 103398
Author(s):  
Mariela L. Spinelli ◽  
Andrea Malits ◽  
Virginia A. García Alonso ◽  
Jacobo Martín ◽  
Fabiana L. Capitanio

PLoS ONE ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. e0233156
Author(s):  
Valeria A. Guinder ◽  
Andrea Malits ◽  
Carola Ferronato ◽  
Bernd Krock ◽  
John Garzón-Cardona ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 426-439 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Schejter ◽  
Gabriel Genzano ◽  
Esteban Gaitán ◽  
Carlos D. Perez ◽  
Claudia S. Bremec

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