Abstract

BackgroundAnthropogenic pressures on marine ecosystems have increased over the last 75 years and are expected to intensify in the future with potentially dramatic cascading consequences for human societies. It is therefore crucial to rebuild marine life-support systems and aim for future healthy ecosystems. Nowadays, there is a reasonable understanding of the impacts of human pressure on marine ecosystems; but no studies have drawn an integrative retrospective analysis of the marine research on the topic. A systematic consolidation of the literature is therefore needed to clearly describe the scientific knowledge clusters and gaps as well as to promote a new era of integrative marine science and management. We focus on the five direct anthropogenic drivers of biodiversity loss defined by the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES): (1) climate change; (2) direct exploitation; (3) pollution; (4) biological invasions; and (5) sea-use change. Our systematic map’s regional focus lies on the North Sea, which is among the most impacted marine ecosystems around the globe. The goal of the present study is to produce the first comprehensive overview of how marine research on anthropogenic drivers in the North Sea has grown and changed over the past 75 years. Ultimately, this systematic map will highlight the most urgent challenges facing the North Sea research domain.MethodsThe search will be restricted to peer-reviewed articles, reviews, meta-analyses, book chapters, book reviews, proceeding papers and grey literature using the most relevant search engines for literature published between 1945 and 2020. All authors will participate in the adjustment of the search in order to consider all relevant studies analyzing the effect of the direct anthropogenic drivers on the North Sea marine ecosystem. The references will be screened for relevance according to a predefined set of eligibility/ineligibility criteria by a pool of six trained reviewers. At stage one, each abstract and title will be independently screened by two reviewers. At stage two, potentially relevant references will be screened in full text by two independent reviewers. Subsequently, we will extract a suite of descriptive meta-data and basic information of the relevant references using the SysRev platform. The systematic map database composed will provide the foundation for an interactive geographical evidence map. Moreover, we will summarize our findings with cross-validation plots, heat maps, descriptive statistics, and a publicly available narrative synthesis. The aim of our visualization tools is to ensure that our findings are easily understandable by a broad audience.

Highlights

  • Anthropogenic pressures on marine ecosystems have increased over the last 75 years and are expected to intensify in the future with potentially dramatic cascading consequences for human societies

  • Over the last 75 years, as demographic pressure and economic activity increased in coastal areas, anthropogenic pressures on marine ecosystems have grown and accumulated to affect almost directly or indirectly all the oceans, their biodiversity, resilience and functionality, leading to severe negative consequences for the supply of multiple ecosystem services and human well-being [4, 9,10,11,12]

  • Three other anthropogenic drivers of ecosystem changes, namely human-driven climate change, pollution and invasive alien species are considered as more-recent threats with the potential to become the major drivers of global biodiversity loss in the coming years [14,15,16]

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Summary

Methods

The method used to generate the systematic map will follow as precisely as possible the Collaboration for Environmental Evidence (CEE) Guidelines and Standards for Evidence Synthesis in Environmental Management [44]. A test list of 50 relevant scientific articles, which encompassed literature on the five direct anthropogenic drivers of ecosystem change, was defined by all authors (see Additional file 2) to develop the search string and compare the comprehensiveness of searches against each other [46]. Prior to the final search and data extraction the six members will be trained in the screening process and data extraction protocol They will review more than 30 scientific articles at title and abstract stage consecutively, to ensure consistency. Relevant outcomes The study describes, assesses, makes projections of past, current and future impacts of at least one of the five direct anthropogenic drivers of change and/ or analyses the biological and/or ecological effects of global change management measures on the North Sea marine ecosystem. Authors will not be contacted in case of missing information in anthropogenic drivers of marine ecosystem changes develop over the past 75 years (1945–2020) regarding the North Sea?

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