Integrated Assessment of Atlantic Marine Ecosystems in Space and Time

ACRONYM
iAtlantic
Title
Integrated Assessment of Atlantic Marine Ecosystems in Space and Time
General information
Measuring the impact of climate change on the Atlantic iAtlantic assesses health of deep and open-ocean Atlantic ecosystems. It scales and standardises measurements from different disciplines so ecosystem status can be assessed against multiple stressors and global change. It will predict where and when synergistic effects of global change and multiple stressors occur, and what implications these will have for society, economy and ocean health. iAtlantic focuses on 12 key areas of the ocean, using innovative approaches to upscale observations to address basin scale issues. Over 30 expeditions will study ecosystems most at risk of change. iAtlantic also builds human and technical capacities by creating iAtlantic Fellows through a capacity building programme including hands-on work at sea, technology transfer, analytical techniques and data interpretation training and a mentoring programme. iAtlantic will take an interdisciplinary scientific approach to unifying stakeholder efforts to better inform sustainable management and enhance human and observational capacity throughout the Atlantic. The integration of ecosystem data with major circulation pathways connecting the North and South linked with climatic data and forecasts provides a systematic approach to jointly assess and tackle policy challenges. Ocean physics and ecosystem connectivity will enable high-resolution oceanographic hindcasts and forecasts of future circulation together with ground-truthing genomic data. Advances in eDNA genomics, machine learning and autonomous underwater robotics will be combined with existing data to provide a step-changes in predictive habitat mapping approaches to expand species and biodiversity observations from local to basin-scales. Ecological timeseries, including innovative palaeoceanographic and genomic reconstructions, will provide an unprecedented view of the impacts of climate change on Atlantic ecosystems. Assessment of the impact of multiple stressors will identify key drivers of ecosystem change and tipping points. New data will come from 12 carefully selected regions in the deep sea and open ocean that are of international conservation significance and of interest to Blue Economy and Blue Growth sectors. Innovative and efficient data handling and data publishing approaches will establish a better integrated Atlantic Ocean observation data community. Capacity and cooperation between science, industry and policymakers bordering the Atlantic will be boosted by joint multi-disciplinary research cruises, enhanced S Atlantic monitoring arrays, scientific training events, iAtlantic Fellowships and industry focussed workshops. Results will be used to stimulate dialogue with stakeholders and critically assess current ocean governance frameworks generating increased capacity for Marine Spatial Planning and enabling Blue Growth scenarios to be rapidly evaluated.
Start
June, 2019
End
May, 2023
Funding (total)
10631000
Funding (GEOMAR)
948000
Funding body / Programme
    EU / HORIZON 2020, Blue Growth
Coordination
University of Edinburgh (), UK
Contact
Partners
University of Edinburgh, UK
University of Vale do Itajaí (Univali), Brazil
University of the Western Cape (UWC), South Africa
Spanish Institute of Oceanography (IEO), Spain
Institute of Marine Research (IMAR), Portugal
Seascape Consultants LTD, UK
French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea (IFREMER), France
National Oceanography Centre (NOC), UK
Heriot Watt University, UK
University of Bremen - MARUM Center for Marine Environmental Sciences (MARUM), Germany
University of Sao Paulo (USP), Brazil
University of Kwazulu-Natal (UKZN), South Africa
Scottish Association for Marine Science LBG (SAMS), UK
National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET), Argentina
University College Cork - National University of Ireland (UCC), Ireland
Federal University of Espírito Santo (UFES), Brazil
Nelson Mandela University, South Africa
University of Gothenburg, Sweden