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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2017-01-26
    Description: Human exploitation and use of marine and coastal areas are apparent and growing in many regions of the world. For instance, fishery, shipping, military, raw material exploitation, nature protection and the rapidly expanding offshore wind power technology are competing for limited resources and space. The development and implementation of Integrated Coastal Zone Management (ICZM) strategies could help to solve these problems. Therefore, suitable spatial assessment, modeling, planning and management tools are urgently needed. These tools have to deal with data that include complex information on different spatial and temporal scales. A systematic approach based on the development of future scenarios which are assessed by combining different simulationmodels, GIS methods and an integrating set of ecological integrity indicators, was applied in a case study in the German North Sea. Here, the installation of huge offshore wind parks within the near future is planned. The aim was to model environmental effects of altered sea-use patterns on marine biota. Indicators of ecological integrity were used to assess altering conditions and possible ecosystem shifts ranging from systems' degradations to the development of highly productive and diverse artificial reef systems. The results showed that some ecosystem processes and properties and related indicators are sensitive to changes generated by offshore wind park installations while others did not react as hypothesized.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2022-01-31
    Description: Highlights: • A combination of methods is necessary to assess the foraging ecology of avocets. • Marine fish make up a higher proportion of the diet than previously assumed. • Telemetry data indicate that intertidal channels are important foraging grounds. • Avocet behaviour implies high fish densities in intertidal channels. • Protected areas are important habitats for breeding, resting and foraging avocets. Abstract: Pied avocets (Recurvirostra avosetta) breeding in the Wadden Sea typically forage in shallow water, using their characteristic upward-curved bill to feed on macrozooplankton in the water column and prey items in the uppermost centimetre of the sediment. Former studies on prey choice based on droppings and visual observations of feeding behaviour suggested that ragworms were the main prey items of avocets. The present study combined different methods to assess the foraging ecology of breeding avocets in the eastern Wadden Sea. Important foraging grounds were identified using GPS telemetry. Diet was analysed from droppings and stable isotope signatures of whole blood samples from breeding avocets at two different colonies in April–June 2014 and 2015. Analysis of droppings confirmed the former results, but stable isotope analysis suggested that marine fish comprised the highest proportion of the avocet diet by mass. Telemetry data indicated that intertidal channels close to the breeding areas were used as the main foraging grounds. Avocets performed short foraging trips (maximum distance: 0.3–5.9 km) mainly during the daytime. Logger data and diet analysis thus implied the existence of high fish densities in intertidal channels, underlining the importance of this saltmarsh habitat as foraging areas for breeding avocets.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
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    Sabine Horn
    In:  EPIC3ECSA 55 Unbounded boundaries and shifting baselines: Estuaries and coastal seas in a rapidly changing world, London, 2015-09-06-2015-09-09Sabine Horn
    Publication Date: 2018-02-15
    Description: The Wadden Sea at the western coasts of Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands is one of the globally most important foraging areas for breeding and migrating birds which act at the same time as indicators for the ecological condition of the ecosystem. However, little is known about how the intense predation pressure of birds influences the Wadden Sea food web. The aim of the interdisciplinary project STopP (From Sediment to Top Predator) is to determine the food web structure in different Wadden Sea habitat types in terms of the interaction between the basis of the food web and birds as top predators. Studied habitat types included the most important foraging areas of birds; mussel banks, cockle beds, sand flats, mud flats, seagrass meadows and beds of the immigrant razor clam Ensis directus a recently preferred prey item of several bird species. Data were analysed using the Ecological Network Analysis (ENA) that reflects trophic structures within the systems and reveals direct and indirect relations between the lower and the upper trophic levels. Preliminary results show that bird predation increases the complexity of the food web due to an increase in connections and a higher total system throughput. On the other hand the predation has also a destabilizing effect due to a high demand of system’s carbon stocks and increased exports out of the tidal system. In addition, analyses show considerable indirect dependencies of birds to lower trophic levels such as sediment POC and phytoplankton. Future scenarios modelled with ENA shall show how changes within the lower trophic levels would affect foraging birds due to anthropogenic or natural impacts. Further analysis will focus on the importance of special habitat types for different bird species and the influence of changes in the biomass of key species for the whole ecosystem food web.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    facet.materialart.
    Unknown
    Sabine Horn
    In:  EPIC350th European Marine Biology Symposium��, Helgoland, 2015-09-21-2015-09-25Sabine Horn
    Publication Date: 2018-02-15
    Description: The Wadden Sea at the western coasts of Germany, Denmark and the Netherlands is one of the globally most important foraging areas for breeding and migrating birds acting as indicators for the ecological condition of the ecosystem. However, little is known about how the intense predation pressure of birds influences the Wadden Sea food web. The aim of the interdisciplinary project STopP is to determine the food web structure in terms of the interaction between the basis of the food web and birds as top predators. Studied habitat types included the most important foraging areas of birds; mussel banks, cockle beds, sand flats, mud flats, seagrass meadows and beds of the immigrant razor clam Ensis directus a recently preferred prey item of several bird species. Data were analysed using the Ecological Network Analysis (ENA) that reflects trophic structures within the systems and reveals direct and indirect relations between the lower and the upper trophic levels. Preliminary results show that bird predation increases the complexity of the food web due to an increase in connections and a higher total system throughput. On the other hand the predation has also a destabilizing effect due to a high demand of system’s carbon stocks and increased exports out of the tidal system. Furthermore, analyses show considerable indirect dependencies of birds to lower trophic levels such as sediment POC and phytoplankton. Future scenarios modelled with ENA shall show how changes within the lower trophic levels would affect foraging birds due to anthropogenic or natural impacts.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Conference , notRev
    Format: application/pdf
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-12-03
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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