Acronym BAZOOCA
Category
Fisheries
Title Baltic zooplankton cascades
Programme BONUS
Instrument (FP6)
Contact Type (FP7)
Strand (Interreg)
NA
Theme (FP7)
Activity Area (FP6)
Regional Area (Interreg)
Action (COST)
NA
Specific Programme (FP7)
NA
Funding source National-European
Coordinator Peter Tiselius
Coordinator email peter.tiselius@marecol.gu.se
Coordinator institution
UGOT - University of Gothenburg (Sweden)
Institutions involved
LNU - Linnaeus University (Sweden) ,
SMHI - Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute (Sweden) ,
DTU - Technical University of Denmark (Denmark) ,
UMU - UMEA University (Sweden) ,
UiB - University of Bergen (Norway) ,
UH - University of Helsinki (Finland) ,
Start year 2008
End year 2011
Funding (€) € 1,962,881
Website http://www.bonusportal.org/about_bonus/bonus_and_era-net/bonus_2009-2011/bonus_projects/bazooca
Summary The recent introduction of the alien ctenophore Mnemiopsis into the Baltic is alarming and may exacerbate existing perturbations such as eutrophication, over fishing, climate change and invasive species. We aim to test the overall hypothesis that effects of Mnemiopsis will cascade in the pelagic food web in the Baltic. By use of models, experiments and field studies we will quantify ecosystem consequences of Mnemiopsis in the pelagic food web, from microbes to gelatinous top predators. Focal topics include predation on cod eggs and larvae, changes in water clarity leading to regime shifts from fish to jellyfish and couplings between plankton and microbes. Interactions and cascading effects will be quantified within natural spatial (Baltic proper, Bothnian Sea, Bothnian Bay) and environmental (oxygen, temperature, salinity, light, N, P) gradients. We will monitor Mnemiopsis synchronically with environmental and biological parameters relevant for other trophic levels. The project gathers the best competence available to address these processes. State-of-the-art techniques will be applied in field, laboratory and modelling studies. The altered pelagic community balance in the Baltic may have severe consequences for biodiversity. Negative socio-economic consequences for fisheries and industries may be significant, but the project will provide fundamental insights for policy making and prudent fisheries and ecosystem management of the Baltic.
Keywords
Impacts;
Alien species;
Marine Region
22
Southern Central Baltic-West (27.IIId.25)
27
Bothnian Bay (27.IIId.31)
18
West of Gotland (27.IIId.27)
21
Southern Central Baltic-East (27.IIId.26)
17
Bothnian Sea (27.IIId.30)
5
Marine Region Map