Author/Authors :
Dan Baird، نويسنده , , Harald Asmus، نويسنده , , Ragnhild Asmus، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus flow networks, consisting of 59 compartments, were constructed for
the Sylt-Rømø Bight, a large shallow sea in the German Wadden Sea. These networks were analysed
using ecological network analysis. Each network depicts the standing stock of each component in the
ecosystem, and the flows between them. The trophic efficiency by which material is utilised in the Bight
increase from 3%, to 6% to 17% for C, N and P, respectively. The number of cycles though which these
elements pass increase from 1 197 for carbon, to 414744 and 538 800 for nitrogen and phosphorus,
respectively. The Finn Cycling Index, reflecting the amount of material recycled as a fraction of the total
system activity, TST, increases from 17% for carbon, to 43% for nitrogen, to 81% for phosphorus. Other
system level attributes such as the Average Path Length, the Average Internal Mutual Information,
Relative Ascendancy, Relative and Normalized Redundancy, show an increase from the carbon to the
nitrogen to the phosphorus networks. Phosphorus is tightly cycled over longer pathways than the other
two elements, and also has the longest residence time in the Bight. Postulated differences between the
behaviour of energy (or carbon) and biogeochemical networks in coastal ecosystems are evident from
the results obtained from ecological network analysis.