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Food web models and data for studying fisheries and environmental impacts on Eastern Pacific ecosystemsFCRR 2005, Vol. 13(1)Sylvie Guénette; Villy Christensen Director's ForewordThere are various ways ecosystem "control", and two of these are 'top-down control' and 'bottom-up control', usually set as alternatives. This dichotomy has various incarnations; in the Pacific Northwest it is referred to as the 'Thompson-Burkenroad debate', with the former associated with top-down control (here: of halibut biomass, by fishing), and the latter bottom-up control (with environmental variability responsible for changes in the recruitment, and eventually, the biomass of halibut). When applied to ecosystems, more often than not, the 'bottom-up' part of this dichotomy has more evidence in its favour, particularly in the Pacific Northwest, where 'regime shifts' tend to be invoked almost exclusively to explain ecosystem changes. The main reason for this asymmetry, however, is that it is easier to measure temperature and its variability, or chlorophyll and its variability, than to construct and fit ecosystem models and test how much they explain of the variability at hand. However, it has now become possible to straightforwardly construct models of ecosystems, and to fit them with time-series data, and thus to test top-down control hypotheses, i.e., to separate out top-down from bottom-up effects. These tests, which required ecosystem models such as documented in this report, have not shown regime shifts to be unimportant. Rather, they have shown, at least for the North Pacific, that bottom-up and top-down processes occur simultaneously, and that both must be taken in account when modelling these ecosystems. Thus, this document is part of what will take us beyond the dichotomy, toward the complex hypotheses that these complex ecosystems deserve. Daniel Pauly Fisheries, the environment, or what? An introductionThe North Pacific is a hot-bed for understanding how marine populations are
impacted by humans as well as by environmental conditions. The "Thompson-Burkenroad
debate" has been ongoing since the late-1940s: what drives the marked fluctuations
in Pacific halibut that has been observed over the past century? Dr William
Thompson, who started up the work of the International Pacific Halibut Commission,
IPHC, argued that the changes in halibut abundance could be fully explained
by changes in fishing pressure, i.e. that they were the result of successful
management on the part of IPHC, while his adversary, Dr Martin Burkenroad questioned
if the populations trends could be accounted for by fishing pressure on its
own, or if wasn't rather a question of environmental factors impacting halibut
recruitment. While Thompson and Burkenroad actually never debated the relative
role of fisheries and the environment - indeed it may well be that they would
actually agree that one factor in itself would not suffice to give us the full
explanation their debate has lived on, and both sides still have proponents
arguing for one over the other. Examining the Pacific halibut trends now, nearly
60 years after the debate started, still yields inconclusive answers only. We
cannot name the culprit. Table of Contents
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