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Deriving pre-eutrophic conditions from an ensemble model approach for the North-West European seas

Frontiers in Marine Science 2023 25 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Sonja M. van Leeuwen, Johan van der Molen, Sonja M. van Leeuwen, Tineke A. Troost, Johan van der Molen, Tineke A. Troost, Anouk Blauw, Annelotte van der Linden, Sonja M. van Leeuwen, Hermann-J. Lenhart, Sonja M. van Leeuwen, Johan van der Molen, Annelotte van der Linden, Hermann-J. Lenhart, Johan van der Molen, T. C. Prins, Tiago Silva, Anouk Blauw, Anouk Blauw, Xavier Desmit, Liam Fernand, René Friedland, Martin Plus, Onur Kerimoglu, Martin Plus, Geneviève Lacroix, Annelotte van der Linden, Annelotte van der Linden, Alain Lefebvre, Liam Fernand, Johan van der Molen, Tineke A. Troost, Martin Plus, Itzel Ruvalcaba Baroni, Tiago Silva, Christoph Stegert, Christoph Stegert, Tineke A. Troost, Lauriane Vilmin

Summary

An eight-model ensemble approach simulated pre-eutrophic (circa 1900) conditions for North-West European seas, finding distinctly lower nutrient concentrations and altered nitrogen-to-phosphorus ratios in coastal areas compared to current conditions, providing a science-based reference for eutrophication management.

Body Systems

The pre-eutrophic state of marine waters is generally not well known, complicating target setting for management measures to combat eutrophication. We present results from an OSPAR ICG-EMO model assessment to simulate the pre-eutrophic state of North-East Atlantic marine waters. Using an ecosystem model ensemble combined with an observation-based weighting method we derive sophisticated estimates for key eutrophication indicators. Eight modelling centres applied the same riverine nutrient loads, atmospheric nutrient deposition rates and boundary conditions to their specific model set-up to ensure comparability. The pre-eutrophic state was defined as a historic scenario of estimated nutrient inputs (riverine, atmospheric) at around the year 1900, before the invention and widespread use of industrial fertilizers. The period 2009-2014 was used by all participants to simulate both the current state of eutrophication and the pre-eutrophic scenario, to ensure that differences are solely due to the changes in nutrient inputs between the scenarios. Mean values were reported for winter dissolved inorganic nutrients and total nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus) and the nitrogen to phosphorus ratio, and for growing season chlorophyll, chlorophyll 90 th percentile, near-bed oxygen minimum and net phytoplankton production on the level of the OSPAR assessment areas. Results showed distinctly lower nutrient concentrations and nitrogen to phosphorus ratio’s in coastal areas under pre-eutrophic conditions compared to current conditions (except in the Meuse Plume and Seine Plume areas). Chlorophyll concentrations were estimated to be as much as ~40% lower in some areas, as were dissolved inorganic phosphorus levels. Dissolved inorganic nitrogen levels were found to be up to 60% lower in certain assessment areas. The weighted average approach reduced model disparities, and delivered pre-eutrophic concentrations in each assessment area. Our results open the possibility to establish reference values for indicators of eutrophication across marine regions. The use of the new assessment areas ensures local ecosystem functioning is better represented while political boundaries are largely ignored. As such, the reference values are less associated to member states boundaries than to ecosystem boundaries.

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