Authors
David Ainley, Grant Ballard, Steve Ackley, Louise K Blight, Joseph T Eastman, Steven D Emslie, Amélie Lescroël, Silvia Olmastroni, Susan E Townsend, Cynthia T Tynan, Peter Wilson, Eric Woehler
Publication date
2007/9
Journal
Antarctic Science
Volume
19
Issue
3
Pages
283-290
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Description
Investigations in recent years of the ecological structure and processes of the Southern Ocean have almost exclusively taken a bottom-up, forcing-by-physical-processes approach relating various species' population trends to climate change. Just 20 years ago, however, researchers focused on a broader set of hypotheses, in part formed around a paradigm positing interspecific interactions as central to structuring the ecosystem (forcing by biotic processes, top-down), and particularly on a “krill surplus” caused by the removal from the system of more than a million baleen whales. Since then, this latter idea has disappeared from favour with little debate. Moreover, it recently has been shown that concurrent with whaling there was a massive depletion of finfish in the Southern Ocean, a finding also ignored in deference to climate-related explanations of ecosystem change. We present two examples from the literature …
Total citations
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