Predicting the future of coastal marine ecosystems in the rapidly changing Arctic: The potential of palaeoenvironmental records

Maija Heikkilä, Sofia Ribeiro, Kaarina Weckström, Anna J. Pienkowski

Research output: Contribution to journalReview Articlepeer-review

Abstract

Frozen components on land and in the ocean (sea ice, ice sheets, glaciers and permafrost) form the cryosphere, which, together with the ocean, moderates the physical and chemical habitat for life in the Arctic and beyond. Changes in these components, as a response to rapidly warming climate in the Arctic, are intensely expressed in the coastal zone. These areas receive increased terrestrial runoff while subject to a changing sea-ice and ocean environment. Proxies derived from marine sediment archives provide long-term data that extend beyond instrumental measurements. They are therefore fundamental in disentangling human-driven versus natural processes, changes and responses. This paper (1) provides an overview of current Arctic cryosphere change, (2) reviews state-of-the-art palaeoecological approaches, (3) identifies methodological and knowledge gaps, and (4) discusses the strengths and future potential of palaeoecology and palaeoceanography to respond to societally relevant coastal marine ecosystem challenges. We utilise responses to an open survey conducted by the Future Earth Past Global Changes (PAGES) working group Arctic Cryosphere Change and Coastal Marine Ecosystems (ACME). Significant research advancements have taken place in recent decades, including the increasingly common use of multi-proxy (multiple lines of evidence) studies, improved understanding of species-environment relationships, and development of novel proxies. Significant gaps remain, however, in the understanding of proxy sources and behaviour, the use of quantitative techniques, and the availability of reference data from coastal environments. We highlight the need for critical methodological refinement, interdisciplinary collaboration on research approaches, and enhanced communication across the scientific community.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100319
JournalAnthropocene
Volume37
Number of pages13
ISSN2213-3054
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2022
MoE publication typeA2 Review article in a scientific journal

Fields of Science

  • 1172 Environmental sciences
  • Cryosphere
  • Coastal ecosystems
  • Sea ice
  • Terrestrial runoff
  • Climate proxies
  • Sediment archives
  • NORTHERN NORTH-ATLANTIC
  • SEA-ICE CONDITIONS
  • EASTERN FRAM STRAIT
  • ORGANIC-MATTER
  • DINOFLAGELLATE CYSTS
  • ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE
  • SPATIAL VARIABILITY
  • SURFACE CONDITIONS
  • SHELF SEDIMENTS
  • GREENLAND SHELF
  • 1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology

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