In a paper that attracted considerable media attention, the full extent of depletion of the biogenic reef ecosystems built by the European flat oyster (Ostrea edulis) was shown. Documentary records published over 350 years were collated to create a map of historical oyster reef presence along European coasts. The analysis demonstrates that oyster reefs were once a dominant three-dimensional feature of European shelf seas, and their loss indicates a fundamental restructuring and ‘flattening’ of shallow-shelf seafloors. This unique record demonstrates the highly degraded nature of European seas and provides key baseline context for international restoration commitments. It also provides support for the SEACHANGE WP2 hypothesis that there were significant ecosystem changes in the North Sea before, during and after the industrial transition (WP2)
198 shells specimens from the North Icelandic Shelf (WP4) were processed. With the aid of AAG analysis 36 shell specimens were crossdated into the existing chronology, improving replication through the record and extending it further to the present (2005 – 2021). The new chronology has been used for geochemical sampling to update stable isotope records (δ18O and δ 13C).
δ13C and δ15N (bulk and CSIA) data of bone collagen samples of whales and seals from the Southern Ocean were generated and analysed in collaboration with NHMUK. Samples were originally obtained by NHM prior to and during the period of industrial whaling in Southern Hemisphere (WP5)
Cores from Fetlar Basin, Shetland, have produced evidence in offshore marine deposits of the Storegga tsunami. The cores contain sand and shell lenses within a Holocene mud sequence, indicating a sudden change in hydrodynamic conditions, while radiocarbon dates bracketing the lenses overlap with published dates for the Storegga event (WP1)
Sediment cores from Aarhus Bay, Limfjord and Vejle Fjord were sampled for eDNA analysis to investigate biodiversity changes across the Danish transition to agriculture (WP1).
DNA and metagenomic sequencing data were generated for samples from three sediment cores collected during the 2022 cruise (DY150) from around the Northern Isles, Scotland (WP2).
DNA and metagenomic sequencing data were generated from WP2 midden samples covering the medieval and post-medieval periods.
Generation of high-resolution shell growth and stable isotope (δ18O & δ13C) chronologies of A. islandica (WP1, 2, 4) to determine changes in physical environmental variables and potential changes in primary production through time.
Measurement of carbonate clumped isotopes (Δ47 values) of shell carbonate to verify absolute temperature estimates based on shell stable oxygen isotope data (WP1+2).
δ15N analysis (via BSIA, CSIA) of A. islandica shells (WP1, 2, 4) to determine temporal changes in N isotope baseline and trophic position of bivalves reflecting change in food web structure.