Digital repository of Slovenian research organisations

Show document
A+ | A- | Help | SLO | ENG

Title:Recurrent jellyfish blooms are a consequence of global oscillations
Authors:ID Condon, Robert H. (Author)
ID Duarte, Carlos M. (Author)
ID Pitt, Kylie A. (Author)
ID Robinson, Kelly L. (Author)
ID Lucas, Cathy H. (Author)
ID Sutherland, Kelly R. (Author)
ID Mianzan, Hermes (Author)
ID Bogeberg, Molly (Author)
ID Purcell, Jennifer E. (Author)
ID Decker, Mary Beth (Author)
ID Shin-Ichi, Uye (Author)
ID Madin, Laurence P. (Author)
ID Brodeur, Richard D. (Author)
ID Haddock, Steven Harold David (Author)
ID Malej, Alenka (Author)
ID Parry, Gregory D. (Author)
ID Eriksen, Elena (Author)
ID Quiñones, Javier (Author)
ID Acha, E. Marcelo (Author)
ID Harvey, Michel (Author)
ID Arthur, James M. (Author)
ID Graham, William M. (Author)
Files:URL URL - Source URL, visit http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2012/12/26/1210920110.full.pdf+html
 
.pdf PDF - Presentation file, download (881,45 KB)
MD5: AAD48021950D08460960DD9AAA9BD035
 
URL URL - Source URL, visit https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1210920110
 
Language:English
Typology:1.01 - Original Scientific Article
Organization:Logo NIB - National Institute of Biology
Abstract:A perceived recent increase in global jellyfish abundance has been portrayed as a symptom of degraded oceans. This perception is based primarily on a few case studies and anecdotal evidence, but a formal analysis of global temporal trends in jellyfish populations has been missing. Here, we analyze all available long-term datasets on changes in jellyfish abundance across multiple coastal stations, using linear and logistic mixed models and effect-size analysis to show that there is no robust evidence for a global increase in jellyfish. Although there has been a small linear increase in jellyfish since the 1970s, this trend was unsubstantiated by effect-size analysis that showed no difference in the proportion of increasing vs. decreasing jellyfish populations over all time periods examined. Rather, the strongest nonrandom trend indicated jellyfish populations undergo larger, worldwide oscillations with an approximate 20-y periodicity, including a rising phase during the 1990s that contributed to the perception of a global increase in jellyfish abundance. Sustained monitoring is required over the next decade to elucidate with statistical confidence whether the weak increasing linear trend in jellyfish after 1970 is an actual shift in the baseline or part of an oscillation. Irrespective of the nature of increase, given the potential damage posed by jellyfish blooms to fisheries, tourism, and other human industries, our findings foretell recurrent phases of rise and fall in jellyfish populations that society should be prepared to face.
Publication status:Published
Publication version:Version of Record
Publication date:15.01.2013
Year of publishing:2013
Number of pages:str. 1000-1005
Numbering:Vol. 110, no. 3
PID:20.500.12556/DiRROS-21762 New window
UDC:574
ISSN on article:0027-8424
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1210920110 New window
COBISS.SI-ID:2703695 New window
Publication date in DiRROS:26.03.2025
Views:546
Downloads:478
Metadata:XML DC-XML DC-RDF
:
Copy citation
  
Share:Bookmark and Share


Hover the mouse pointer over a document title to show the abstract or click on the title to get all document metadata.

Record is a part of a journal

Title:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Shortened title:Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A.
Publisher:National Academy of Sciences
ISSN:0027-8424
COBISS.SI-ID:286487 New window

Document is financed by a project

Funder:NSF - National Science Foundation
Project number:1030149
Name:Collaborative Research: Plankton Community Composition and Trophic Interactions as Modifiers of Carbon Export in the Sargasso Sea

Funder:NSF - National Science Foundation
Project number:0934727
Name:CMG Collaborative Research: Reconstruction of Dispersal Strategies of Marine Organisms via Semiparametric Dynamic Spatial Regression

Funder:ARIS - Slovenian Research and Innovation Agency
Project number:P1-0237-2009
Name:Raziskave obalnega morja

Funder:NCEAS - NationalCenter for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis
Project number:DEB-94-21535

Licences

License:CC BY-NC-ND 4.0, Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
Link:http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Description:The most restrictive Creative Commons license. This only allows people to download and share the work for no commercial gain and for no other purposes.

Secondary language

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:meduze, globalna distribucija, razmnoževanje, polipi, globalna nihanja, umentni podvodni habitati


Back