Marine Ecosystem Food Web from NOAA's Website |
For example, fish abundance and the type of fish present
in coastal area depends on currents, water temperature and salinity,
availability of food and hiding areas, presence of predators and
pollution. Looking at only a few of these components in isolation does not reflect what actually happens in the environment.
Knowing how physical, biological and geochemical
components interact is critical for predicting impacts of different policy
decisions and actions. Given that there are so many different components
to the environment and interactions between these, ecosystem modeling is
a useful tool to put it all the pieces together.
Models are like a map which serves to represent reality
and can help guide us how to get to where we want to go. Models are only
as useful as the quality of the data and assumptions that they are built
on. Significant advances have been made in modeling capabilities and
making them easier to set up and use, and multiple models are useful to
evaluate management decisions.
Models can replicate historic changes and be used to
assess relative impacts of human actions and environmental changes and improve
efforts to predict future changes.
Its important that stakeholders and the public have the
opportunity to be involved in modeling process that inform management decisions
to ensure that models are directed and used effectively.
COA recently attended an ecosystem modeling workshop.
Click here for more information.
Underwater video produced using ecosystem modeling information on Chesapeake Bay
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