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dc.contributor.authorBratli, Victor André
dc.date.accessioned2023-03-22T00:36:35Z
dc.date.available2023-03-22T00:36:35Z
dc.date.issued2023-03-22
dc.date.submitted2023-03-21T23:00:32Z
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11250/3059642
dc.descriptionRevised version: some spelling errors corrected.
dc.description.abstractThis thesis aims to contribute to existing knowledge about the ecosystem of kelp forests in Norway. The thesis revolves around the creation of a model that is a simplified conceptual representation of the ecosystem, which I augmented with empirical data and estimates, to make it more realistic and relevant for the Norwegian context. The model values are based on an ecosystem under ideal environmental conditions (from mid-Norway). The model successfully recreates historical trends of the real system, while still maintaining its simplicity. I then identify the main mechanisms that contributes to driving a shift in state from kelp forest to urchin barren. The main mechanism starts with the reliance of gadid fish population on the L.Hyperborea kelp forest to uphold numbers that can counteract an independent population growth of the green sea urchin (S.Droebachiensis). This is because urchins can graze down entire kelp forests within a few years if they are not controlled by predators. This mechanism constitutes a strong reinforcing feedback loop which shifts dominance at thresholds decided by different levels of urchins in the respective states. In Norway, the two leverage points humans have on the ecosystem is kelp trawling and fish harvest, which both can tip the system to change from a kelp forest to an urchin barren. Fish harvest of the coastal gadid fish was found to be the more impactful leverage point of the two. The more pressure humans put on the kelp forest, the more fragile it becomes, proposing that environmental fluctuations that the system otherwise can handle might now push the system beyond its tipping point. I find that with trawl landings of 60% of a local kelp forest, the common 5-year trawling interval could drive the system to a barren state after three trawling periods. With a one-year extension of the interval, to 6 years, the collapse of the kelp forest was avoided. With a predicted increase in kelp trawling, and current trawling landings of up to 75% of local forests, the length of fallow period between each trawling might decide if the forest will collapse or not. The systems knowledge revealed by this thesis and its findings could be used for policy design and to inform decision-making in managing kelp ecosystems.
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherThe University of Bergen
dc.rightsCopyright the Author. All rights reserved
dc.subjectcoastal fish
dc.subjectsea urchin barren
dc.subjectfishing
dc.subjecttrawling
dc.subjectSystem Dynamics
dc.subjectharvest
dc.subjectKelp
dc.subjectrenewable resource.
dc.subjectstate shift
dc.subjectseals
dc.subjectbarren state
dc.subjecttipping point
dc.subjectcoast
dc.subjectshift in dominance
dc.subjectNorway
dc.subjectcollapse
dc.subjectfeedback loops
dc.subjectcoastal cod
dc.subjectsea urchins
dc.subjectcoastal ecosystem
dc.subjectseabirds
dc.subjectkelp forest
dc.titleThe Effects of Human Activities on The Ecosystem of Kelp Forests in Norway: A System Dynamics Modelling Approach
dc.typeMaster thesis
dc.date.updated2023-03-21T23:00:32Z
dc.rights.holderCopyright the Author. All rights reserved
dc.description.degreeMasteroppgave i systemdynamikk
dc.description.localcodeGEO-SD351
dc.description.localcodeINTL-PSYK
dc.description.localcodeMASV-SYSDY
dc.description.localcodeINTL-MN
dc.description.localcodeINTL-KMD
dc.description.localcodeINTL-JUS
dc.description.localcodeINTL-SV
dc.description.localcodeINTL-MED
dc.description.localcodeINTL-HF
dc.subject.nus733199
fs.subjectcodeGEO-SD351
fs.unitcode15-41-0


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