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Effects of fishing on the marine ecosystem of Beibu Gulf.

CHEN Zuo-zhi1,2,3;QIU Yong-song1;JIA Xiao-ping1;ZHONG Zhi-hui1   

  1. 1Ministry of Agriculture Key Laboratory of Marine Fishery Ecology and E
    nvironment, South China Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fisheries Sciences, Guangzhou 510300, China;2Ministry of Agriculture Key Laboratory for Sustainable Utilization of Marine Fisheries Resources, Qingdao 266071, Shandong, China;3College of Marine Science and Technology, Shanghai Fisheries University, Shanghai 200090, China
  • Received:2007-11-15 Revised:1900-01-01 Online:2008-07-20 Published:2008-07-20

Abstract: By using Ecopath with Ecosim 5.1 software, the Ecosim model of Beibu Gulf marine ecosystem  in 1959-1960 was constructed, which included about 20 functional groups such as fishery, marine mammals, seabirds, sharks, pelagic fishes, demersal fishes, and benthic crustaceans, etc. Through the comparison with the investigation data in 1997-1999, the effects of fishing on the structure and function of Beibu Gulf marine ecosystem were analyzed. The results indicated that with the increasing fishing pressure in past forty years, the ecosystem structure and function shifted drastically, with the biomass of long-lived, high trophic level and piscivorous fishes declined while short-lived and small fishes and benthic invertebrates dominated gradually. The biomass of piscivorous species in 1999 was only 6% of that in 1960, while cephalopods increased 2.7 times or more. The trophic level of the catch declined from 3.2 in 1960 to 2.98 in 1999, which fitted the rule of “fishing down the food web” and suggested that the present exploitation patterns were unsustainable. Based on the data of the 1990s, the changes of the ecosystem under decreasing fishing pressure were predicted. This study validated the feasibility of Ecosim model in predicting the effects of fishing pressure on marine ecosystem.

Key words: Hulunbeier sandy land, vegetation restoration, nifH gene, denaturing gradient gelelectrophoresis (DGGE), community diversity.