Exploitation of the marine ecosystem in the sub-Antarctic: historical impacts and current consequences
2009
The Southern Ocean is ofren portrayed as rhe last great wilderness. However, the marine living resources of the sub-Antarctic islands haw
been harvested for over two centuries. ExploitaLion began with the upper trophic levels and the high-value air-breathing species, before
progressing down the food chain to the lower trophic levels and the less valuable nekton and zooplankton. Exploitation in the sub-Antarctic
began in the late eighteenth century, nowhere better typified than at South Georgia. At South Georgia exploitation started with Antarctic
Fur Seals,Arctocephalus gazella, which were reduced almost to extinction by the mid-nineteenth century. As the fur trade rapidly became
uneconomic, new targets were sought and by the end of the nineteenth century, oilers were hunting for Southern Elephant Seals, Mirounga leonina, Southern Right Whales, Eubalaena australis, and some sub-Antarctic penguin species. As these stocks also declined and their commercial
exploitation became uneconomic, the focus shifted such that by the beginning of the twentieth century, harvesting for other baleen
whales (the so-called rorquals) and Sperm Whales,Physeter macroephalus, was well-established. With the demise of the great whales, other
less valuable species were then sought, so that by the latter half of the twentieth century, fishing for finfish and krill had begun. Removal of
the upper trophic level species has impacted upon the sub-Antarctic marine system resulting in profound changes, the consequences of which
continue to the present. The consequences of such harvesting are reviewed in the context of an ecosystem model that demonstrates some
of the expected changes in the marine foodweb that may arise as a consequence of harvesting and how, once harvesting ceases, populations
may recover to their pre-exploitation state.The current status of the South Georgia foodweb is reviewed in the context of these predicted
changes. In the period since uncontrolled harvesting ceased, the role of physical environmental forcing factors has been recognised and
found to be key to any understanding of marine foodweb dynamics. These two major forces, historical exploitation and climate change,
may act in concert to alter ecosystem dynamics. Disentangling these confounding drivers may be difficult and complex, but because of the
relatively well-documented history of exploitation the sub-Antarctic may offer one location where it is feasible.
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