Listed below is background material on the Southeast US Continental Shelf
Large Marine Ecosystem. To keep this site
up-to-date, users are requested to provide relevant information
or links to the LME webmaster
.
Brief Description:
This LME is characterized by its temperate climate. It borders the Atlantic Ocean, extending from the Straits of Florida to Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. It contains many bays and sounds, and extensive coastal marshes that provide unique habitats for living marine resources. LME book chapters and articles pertaining to this LME include Yoder, 1991.
I. Productivity:
Upwelling along the Gulf Stream front and intrusions from the Gulf Stream cause short-lived plankton blooms. The offshore upwelling regime is not as intense as in the higher latitude regions (see Yoder 1991, and NOAA, 2002). The Southeast US Continental Shelf LME is considered a Class II, moderately productive (150-300 gC/m2-yr) ecosystem based on SeaWiFS global primary productivity estimates. Additional information is provided by NOAA statistics in Our Living Oceans, 1999, and a chapter on Marine Resources , in Status and Trends of the Nation's Biological Resources.
II. Fish and Fisheries:
Our colleagues at the University of British Columbia Fisheries Center have
detailed
fish catch statistics for this LME, as does the UN Food and Agriculture
Organization. Click on the graph below for more information.
The LME is distinguished by a very high percentage of commercially important crustacean catches. The valuable coastal shrimp fishery (brown, white, pink and red shrimp species) accounts for 10% of the total tonnage landed from the South Atlantic region. A second important fisheries group is clupeoids (herrings, sardines and anchovies). The FAO 10-year trend (1990-1999) for this LME shows a major fluctuation in catch, with a 1994 peak of almost 200,000 tons (see FAO, 2003, figure 18). The capture was about 100,000 tons in 1990, and 60,000 tons in 1999. Our Living Oceans (see NOAA, 1999, p. 215) has specific landings of blue crab, sea urchin and oyster from the Atlantic coast. It also includes landings and spawning biomass of menhaden, from 1950 to 1997, p. 141. The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council has regulatory control over this LME. Coastal pelagic fishes are jointly managed under the Coastal Migratory Pelagic Resources Fishery Management Plan and the regulations adopted by the South Atlantic fishery management council. Check appendix 2 of NOAA, Our Living Oceans, 1999 for specific fishery management plans.
III. Pollution and Ecosystem Health:
The EPA’s Southeast region coincides with the boundaries of the Southeast
US Continental shelf Large Marine Ecosystem (see EPA, 2001, for the coastal
condition of the Southeast). For this LME as a whole, dissolved oxygen
and fish tissue are good, and water clarity, coastal wetlands, eutrophic
condition, sediment and benthos are fair (see EPA’s 7 primary indicators
for this LME in EPA, 2001). The condition of southeastern estuaries is fair.
Approximately 54% of estuarine areas are in good ecological condition (EPA, 2001).
Species, such as shrimp, crabs and menhaden, which account for much of
the harvest of this LME, are estuarine-dependant. For figures for coastal
wetland habitat loss from 1780 to 1980, see EPA, 2001, p. 91. 40% of all
wetlands existing in 1780 had disappeared in 1980. Another primary problem
is sediment contamination by pesticides and metals. Municipal wastewater
treatment plants and pesticides applied to agricultural lands are sources
of coastal pollution. This LME is in the best condition of all 4 continental
LMEs for the USA. EPA’s EMAP Program provides data on environmental stressors
(water quality, sediment quality and tissue bioaccumulation). NOAA’s National
Status and Trends program provides data on toxic contaminants and their
ecological effects.
IV. Socioeconomics:
The 7 EPA indicators provide information about the characteristics of coastal waters that are valued by society. This information is relevant for the human uses of estuaries. The population of the coastal areas bordering this LME increased by 64% from 1970 to 1990 (U.S. Bureau of the Census, 1996). This increase in population pressures will require additional programs and increasing environmental awareness in order to correct existing problems of ecosystem health.
The South Atlantic Fishery Management Council
manages fish stocks in this LME in collaboration with the NMFS
Southeast Fisheries Science Center.
Coastal pelagic fishes are jointly managed under the Coastal Migratory
Pelagic Resources Fishery Management Plan and the regulations adopted by
the South Atlantic Fishery Management Council. Check appendix 2 of NOAA, Our Living Oceans, 1999,
for specific fishery management plans. There is a fishery management
plan for the shrimp fishery. There is increasing need for effective management
of these resources given the predicted influx of people (EPA, 2001).
References:
Articles and LME volumes:
EPA,
2001. National Coastal Condition Report. Chapter 4.
NOAA (National oceanic and Atmospheric Administration), 2002. Large Marine
Ecosystems of the World.
On line at: http://www.lme.noaa.gov.
Yoder, James A. 1991. Warm-temperate food chains of the southeast shelf
ecosystem. In K. Sherman, L.M.
Alexander, and B.D. Gold, eds. Food Chains, Yields, Models, and Management
of Large Marine Ecosystems. AAAS Symposium. Westview Press, Inc., Boulder,
CO. 49-66.
Other References:
A National Atlas: Health and use of coastal waters, United States of America; Fishery resource assessmentMarine Resources , in "Status and Trends of the Nation's Biological Resources", an electronic document published by USGS.
Southeast Fisheries Science Center. 1995. Status of fishery resources off
the southeastern United States for 1993. National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration Technical Memorandum NMFS-SEFC.