Abstract

The paper evaluates the species richness, material transfer, energy flow, and system function of the southwestern Yellow Sea Ecosystem (SYSE) indicating intensive human intervention affecting this large marine ecosystem. Twenty functional groups were chosen to represent the basic components of the SYSE for Ecopath modeling based on offshore surveys, annual bird observations, and the China Fisheries Statistical Yearbooks. Forty-nine species based on 15 functional groups of Ecopath model were assessed by stable isotopic analysis (SIA) to verify ecosystem features, energy flow, and trophic structure of the SYSE derived from Ecopath model. Results showed there was a clear correlation of the estimated trophic structure calculated from SIA and the Ecopath model with R2=0.7184. The SYSE Ecopath model was still at an immature and unstable stage according to outputs of the modeling parameters. This paper provides a verification method of detecting the ecosystem features and maturity, stability, and resilience of marine ecosystems by comparing outputs from Ecopath models with SIA.

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