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Learning from the past - investigating the anthropogenic impact on Asia-Pacific reefs since WWII using coral δ15N records

发布时间:2014/07/24     浏览次数:
时间:2014-7-25 (星期五) 10:00am
地点:周隆泉楼 A3-206
主讲人:Nicolas Duprey博士 Dr
来访单位:香港大学太古海洋科学研究所,香港 Swire Institute of Marine Science HK
邀请人:高树基
联系人:田莉 2183328

Learning from the past - investigating the anthropogenic impact on Asia-Pacific reefs since WWII using coral δ15N records

Nicolas DUPREY1*& David BAKER1

1The Swire Institute of Marine Science, Faculty of Science, The University of Hong Kong, Cape d'Aguilar Road, Shek O, Hong Kong

Abstract-Asia-Pacific (AP) coastlines are facing intense coastal development which exerts a strong pressure on coral reefs ecosystems, in particular, by releasing considerable amounts of nutrients (primarily sewage) into coastal waters. Excess nutrients, like nitrogen, increase coral disease, bioerosion, depress fecundity and thus change community structure and function. The decline of coral reefs in the AP region is predicted to have dramatic ecological and socio-economical consequences considering that76% of all coral species are found in the AP region and that millions of people are reliant on reef resources and services. Although eutrophication is well documented on modern reefs, very little is known about the historical exposure of coral reefs to nitrogen pollution during the last century and how it has shaped modern coral reef ecosystems.

World War II and the post-war era provide interestingcoastal developmentscenarios: Japanese military occupation and subsequent withdrawal, triggered punctuated population changes in the AP region which modulated the severity of anthropogenic nutrient release on coral reefs. Given thathuman sewage is characterized by an anomalously high nitrogen stable isotope ratio (δ15N), and corals use this nitrogen for growth, we can document the increase and decrease of sewage input to the reef over time through the analysis of coral skeletal bands.This talk will present the preliminaryresultsof this retrospective study.

Key Words -Nitrogen pollution, stable isotopes, coral reefs, Asia-Pacific, World War II

Research Interests:

• Understanding the impact of human pollution on marine organisms and ecosystems

• Historical ecology

• Geochemistry; development of geochemical proxies from carbonated archives

• Paleoclimatology, paleoceanography, paleoecology

• Relation between past climate changes and human civilizations

个人网页:http://sites.google.com/site/dupreynic

E-mail - nicolas_duprey@yahoo.fr