Sheet n°310 - January 2009 eastern part of the Pacific Ocean, off the coasts of Peru and Chile. It is an oceanic ecosystem manifesting wide extremes and a whole set of paradoxes. Its waters are turbid brownish green in colour. They are particularly cold for a tropical region (with sea surface temperature about 16°C), owing to a strong phenomenon of coastal upwelling1. It occupies less than 0.1% of the global ocean surface area but is the ground for 10% of the Earth’s fish catch. However, the western side of South America is undergoing the full impact of climatic disturbances coming from over the Pacific such as the warm El Niño and cold La Niña events. In a context of global climate change, it is crucial to understand how this emblematic system functions. To further this aim, IRD researchers and their partners from the Peruvian Marine Institute (IMARPE)2 have been working jointly since 2001 to unravel the paradoxes of this uniquely operating ecosystem. They recently produced the first full review of the subject for 20 years. © IRD/Arnaud Bertrand he Humboldt T Current System operates in the The Humboldt Current : the ecosystem with a range of extremes Peruvian purse-seiners target small coastal pelagic fish like anchovy which proliferate in the Humboldt Current . Its waters generate the world’s most abundant fish production. The northern part of the Humboldt Current displays exceptional biological productivity, owing to nutrients carried up by upwelling. This ecosystem produces more fish per unit surface area than any other open marine space on Earth. The dynamics of the Humboldt Current System is closely governed by that of the whole of the tropical Pacific. More than any other region, this large area is periodically subjected to considerable climatic stress. This is exerted in the form of El Niño events which upset the regimes of wind, rainfall and marine current systems over periods of several months and also affect sea temperatures and oxygen concentrations. The Humboldt Current System also has the special feature of encompassing the most intense minimum oxygen zone3 (MOZ) in the world, and the closest to the ocean surface. Contrary to what was hitherto thought, the region contributes to global-scale greenhouse gas balances, owing partly to denitrification which takes place in the acid waters of the MOZ. This absence of oxygen on the ocean floor preserves the dead organisms deposited in sediments. Investigation of these can help reconstruct past climatic conditions and productivity. The research team showed that the development of the world’s largest monospecific fishery, that of Peruvian anchovy, coincided with the most productive period of the past 700 years. There is practically no oxygen in the water column and this forces many species to congregate massively close to the surface. The fish sometimes have only a dozen metres of oxygenated water in which to live. Such situations could worsen because the MOZs are expanding under the impact of climate change. Prediction of the effects of climate variability on fish stocks and conservation of the ecosystem they belong to are the challenges that drive ongoing multidisciplinary research on the Humboldt Current System. Institut de recherche pour le développement - 44, boulevard de Dunkerque, CS 90009 F-13572 Marseille Cedex 02 - France - www.ird.fr Retrouvez les photos de l'IRD concernant cette fiche, libres de droit pour la presse, sur www.ird.fr/indigo CONTACTS : ARNAUD BERTRAND Unité mixte de recherche Exploited Marine Ecosystems (EME) Adresses: IRD - Instituto del Mar del Perú (IMARPE) Teruel N° 357 - Miraflores Casilla 18-1209 - Lima 18 Perú IRD - CRH Av. Jean Monnet 34203 Sète cedex - France Tel. +51 (1) 6250800 Annexe 864 arnaud.bertrand@ird.fr PIERRE SOLER Directeur du Département Milieux et Environnement (DME) REFERENCES : • Bertrand, A., Guevara, R., Soler, P., Csirke, J., Chavez, F. (Eds). The northern Humboldt Current System: ocean dynamics, ecosystem processes, and fisheries, Special Issue, Progress in Oceanography, vol. 79, pp. 95-412, 2008. • Chavez, F.P., Bertrand, A., Guevara-Carrasco, R., Soler, P., Csirke, J. The northern Humboldt Current System: Brief history, present status and a view towards the future, Progress in Oceanography, vol. 79, pp. 95-105, 2008. KEY WORDS : Humboldt Current, ocean, fisheries, climate change, ecosystem The paradox of the Peruvian anchovy is a good illustration of the unexpected way in which this ecosystem reacts to climate variability. Anchovy have only very limited abilities to migrate and therefore cannot escape unfavourable conditions. They are slow and are obliged to keep near the surface and are easy prey for larger fish, sea lions, birds and fishermen. How therefore can these fish become so prolific in the waters off Peru? The team’s research projects revealed that their secret lay partly in their biological and behavioural flexibility. Anchovy tolerate a wide range of temperatures. If conditions are hazardous, they concentrate in refuge areas. Furthermore, they lay millions of eggs which disperse in all directions, allowing them to explore different environmental conditions. And then, contrary to the theory postulating that productivity is linked to a short food chain, anchovy are not mainly herbivore feeding on phytoplankton : they select the prey that provide the most energy, essentially large-sized animal plankton (zooplankton). To ensure the sustainability of fish stocks, management strategies must take account of the ecosystem’s different components : the populations targeted, but also their predators, prey and competitors. However, this ecosystem approach to fisheries management is difficult to implement because it requires data that are rarely collected, particularly for the non-target species. The Humboldt Current System nevertheless lends itself well to this approach. For 45 years, IMARPE has been conducting exemplary follow-up studies of the condi- tions of this ecosystem. Several times per year it runs sampling campaigns for various species, measurements of physical, biogeochemical and fisheries data (satellite tracking of vessels, sampling of landings and so on). That gave the Peruvian government the possibility of setting in place a real-time adaptive management system, taking into account the ecosystem components as a whole. The Humboldt Current System is very well documented and offers scientists an exceptional opportunity to study the impact of climate variability and change on marine living resources. It also gives a means of assessing the adaptation capacities of marine species to environmental variability. The system’s unique environmental characteristics open a promising window on the future for these organisms. Gaëlle Courcoux - DIC Translation - Nicholas Flay 1. Upwellings are generated by winds that push the surface waters offshore to the open ocean. These winds drive the rising up of colder water, laden with nutrient mineral salts, from the deeper ocean layers along the coasts. 2. This research work is conducted jointly with scientists from Monterey Bay Aquarium (Moss Landing, USA) and the University of Washington (Seattle, USA). 3. The minimum oxygen zones are areas with lowoxygen concentrations located at the eastern edges of tropical oceans, at depths between 50 and 800 m. PRESS OFFICE : Vincent Coronini +33 (0)4 91 99 94 87 presse@ird.fr Daina Rechner +33 (0)4 91 99 94 81 indigo@ird.fr www.ird.fr/indigo Offshore Peru: hauling up the net for fish sampling, mainly anchovy. © IRD/Arnaud Bertrand INDIGO, IRD PHOTO LIBRARY : © IRD/Arnaud Bertrand Sheet n°310 - January 2009 For further information Birds are some of the major predators of anchovy, along with fishermen and sea lions. Gaëlle Courcoux, coordinator Délégation à l’information et à la communication Tél. : +33 (0)4 91 99 94 90 - fax : +33 (0)4 91 99 92 28 - fichesactu@ird.fr