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Dive into the research topics where Michael Townsend is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Townsend.


Biodiversity and Conservation | 2010

A latent threat to biodiversity: consequences of small-scale heterogeneity loss

Judi E. Hewitt; Simon F. Thrush; Andrew M. Lohrer; Michael Townsend

The threat of homogenisation to biodiversity is generally considered to occur at broad scales or in response to high-intensity impacts. Therefore, most biodiversity studies estimate local average or total species richness rather than local heterogeneity. Here we consider the potential for relative shifts between these different aspects of biodiversity at small spatial scales to be an early warning signal for biodiversity loss. In response to chronic, very low-level pollution, we observed a disjunctive response with gamma diversity (total species richness) and beta diversity (heterogeneity) decreasing while alpha diversity (average species richness) was still increasing. Homogenisation may, therefore, affect biodiversity through thresholds that alter the relationship between the average species richness and its heterogeneity, leading to the potential for regime shifts. Our stressor also had a strong negative effect on rare species, meaning that the purported importance of rare species as “insurance” in the face of environmental change may be overstated.


PLOS ONE | 2014

How Can We Identify and Communicate the Ecological Value of Deep-Sea Ecosystem Services?

Niels Jobstvogt; Michael Townsend; Ursula Witte; Nick Hanley

Submarine canyons are considered biodiversity hotspots which have been identified for their important roles in connecting the deep sea with shallower waters. To date, a huge gap exists between the high importance that scientists associate with deep-sea ecosystem services and the communication of this knowledge to decision makers and to the wider public, who remain largely ignorant of the importance of these services. The connectivity and complexity of marine ecosystems makes knowledge transfer very challenging, and new communication tools are necessary to increase understanding of ecological values beyond the science community. We show how the Ecosystem Principles Approach, a method that explains the importance of ocean processes via easily understandable ecological principles, might overcome this challenge for deep-sea ecosystem services. Scientists were asked to help develop a list of clear and concise ecosystem principles for the functioning of submarine canyons through a Delphi process to facilitate future transfers of ecological knowledge. These ecosystem principles describe ecosystem processes, link such processes to ecosystem services, and provide spatial and temporal information on the connectivity between deep and shallow waters. They also elucidate unique characteristics of submarine canyons. Our Ecosystem Principles Approach was successful in integrating ecological information into the ecosystem services assessment process. It therefore has a high potential to be the next step towards a wider implementation of ecological values in marine planning. We believe that successful communication of ecological knowledge is the key to a wider public support for ocean conservation, and that this endeavour has to be driven by scientists in their own interest as major deep-sea stakeholders.


Ecology | 2013

Biogenic habitat transitions influence facilitation in a marine soft‐sediment ecosystem

Andrew M. Lohrer; Iván F. Rodil; Michael Townsend; Luca D. Chiaroni; Judi E. Hewitt; Simon F. Thrush

Habitats are often defined by the presence of key species and biogenic features. However, the ecological consequences of interactions among distinct habitat-forming species in transition zones where their habitats overlap remain poorly understood. We investigated transition zone interactions by conducting experiments at three locations in Mahurangi Harbour, New Zealand, where the abundance of two habitat-forming marine species naturally varied. The two key species differed in form and function: One was a sessile suspension-feeding bivalve that protruded from the sediment (Atrina zelandica; Pinnidae); the other was a mobile infaunal urchin that bioturbated sediment (Echinocardium cordatum; Spatangoida). The experimental treatments established at each site reflected the natural densities of the species across sites (Atrina only, Echinocardium only, Atrina and Echinocardium together, and plots with neither species present). We identified the individual and combined effects of the two key species on sediment characteristics and co-occurring macrofauna. After five months, we documented significant treatment effects, including the highest abundance of co-occurring macrofauna in the Atrina-only treatments. However, the facilitation of macrofauna by Atrina (relative to removal treatments) was entirely negated in the presence of Echinocardium at densities >10 individuals/m2. The transitional areas in Mahurangi Harbour composed of co-occurring Atrina and Echinocardium are currently widespread and are probably more common now than monospecific patches of either individual species, due to the thinning of dense Atrina patches into sparser mixed zones during the last 10-15 years. Thus, although some ecologists avoid ecotones and habitat edges when designing experiments, suspecting that it will skew the extrapolation of results, this study increased our understanding of benthic community dynamics across larger proportions of the seascape and provided insights into temporal changes in community structure associated with patch dynamics. Particularly in situations where non-abrupt habitat transitions are commonplace, documentation of community dynamics in individual biogenic habitats and in mixed transition zones is required in order to scale-up and generalize results.


Marine Pollution Bulletin | 2012

Detecting shifts in ecosystem functioning: the decoupling of fundamental relationships with increased pollutant stress on sandflats.

Andrew M. Lohrer; Michael Townsend; Iván F. Rodil; Judi E. Hewitt; Simon F. Thrush

In this study, we investigated the influence of low level contamination by copper, lead and zinc on the functioning of estuarine sandflat ecosystems by comparing the strength and variability of relationships between benthic macrofauna and fluxes (oxygen and nutrients) at three clean and three mildly contaminated sites. Specifically, as indicators of ecosystem functioning, we examined relationships between bivalve biomass, total benthic respiration and ammonium release, and ammonium uptake and benthic primary production. Furthermore, a small amount of organic matter was added to experimental plots at all sites (35 g/0.2 m²) to evaluate stress-on-stress responses relative to controls. Relationships were strongest at the clean sites (steepest slopes, highest r² values, lowest p-values) and weakest at the mildly contaminated sites and in organically enriched plots. Our results suggest that changes in ecosystem functioning may be occurring at mild (


PLOS ONE | 2015

Detecting Subtle Shifts in Ecosystem Functioning in a Dynamic Estuarine Environment

Daniel R. Pratt; Andrew M. Lohrer; Simon F. Thrush; Judi E. Hewitt; Michael Townsend; Katie Cartner; Conrad A. Pilditch; Rachel J. Harris; Carl Van Colen; Iván F. Rodil

Identifying the effects of stressors before they impact ecosystem functioning can be challenging in dynamic, heterogeneous ‘real-world’ ecosystems. In aquatic systems, for example, reductions in water clarity can limit the light available for photosynthesis, with knock-on consequences for secondary consumers, though in naturally turbid wave-swept estuaries, detecting the effects of elevated turbidity can be difficult. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of shading on ecosystem functions mediated by sandflat primary producers (microphytobenthos) and deep-dwelling surface-feeding macrofauna (Macomona liliana; Bivalvia, Veneroida, Tellinidae). Shade cloths (which reduced incident light intensity by ~80%) were deployed on an exposed, intertidal sandflat to experimentally stress the microphytobenthic community associated with the sediment surface. After 13 weeks, sediment properties, macrofauna and fluxes of oxygen and inorganic nutrients across the sediment-water interface were measured. A multivariate metric of ecosystem function (MF) was generated by combining flux-based response variables, and distance-based linear models were used to determine shifts in the drivers of ecosystem function between non-shaded and shaded plots. No significant differences in MF or in the constituent ecosystem function variables were detected between the shaded and non-shaded plots. However, shading reduced the total explained variation in MF (from 64% in non-shaded plots to 15% in shaded plots) and affected the relative influence of M. liliana and other explanatory variables on MF. This suggests that although shade stress may shift the drivers of ecosystem functioning (consistent with earlier investigations of shading effects on sandflat interaction networks), ecosystem functions appear to have a degree of resilience to those changes.


Frontiers in Marine Science | 2018

The Challenge of Implementing the Marine Ecosystem Service Concept

Michael Townsend; Kate Davies; Nick Hanley; Judi E. Hewitt; Carolyn J. Lundquist; Andrew M. Lohrer

The concept of ecosystem services has gained traction as a means of linking societal benefits to the underlying ecology and functioning of ecosystems, and is now frequently included in decision-making and legislation. Moving the ecosystem service concept from theory into practice is now crucial. However, advancements in this area of research differ by ecosystem type, and marine systems lag significantly behind terrestrial counterparts in terms of understanding, implementation and number of studies. In this paper we explore several reasons why ecosystem service research has been limited in marine systems and we outline the challenges that hinder progress. Marine systems suffer from a scarcity of spatial data relative to terrestrial counterparts. In terrestrial systems the spatial patterns of land-use/land-cover (LULC) are relatively straightforward to access via satellite and have been used as proxy indicators of service provisions. In contrast, remote sensing tools used to study the surface of the Earth are much less effective at capturing images of the seabed, and by extension marine habitats. Marine waters and their constituents are also frequently driven great distances by winds, tides and currents. This creates a challenge for management as the identification and protection of areas where ecosystem services are exploited is not necessarily sufficient to ensure sustained service delivery. Further complications arise from the three-dimensional uses of marine systems, incorporating activities that use the sea surface, the water column and the benthic habitats below. Progress is being made as technological advancements are resulting in the acquisition of spatial data at faster rates and higher resolutions than previously possible. There is a growing capacity to map, model and value an increasing number of services with initiatives such as InVEST or principle-based modelling. We suggest that awareness is needed around the limited progress in marine systems as this could affect the way we value the biosphere and the relative proportion between biomes.


Marine and Freshwater Behaviour and Physiology | 2017

The effects of thin mud deposits on the behaviour of a deposit-feeding tellinid bivalve: implications for ecosystem functioning

Lisa D. McCartain; Michael Townsend; Simon F. Thrush; David S. Wethey; Sarah A. Woodin; Nils Volkenborn; Conrad A. Pilditch

ABSTRACT A laboratory experiment was conducted, to examine how feeding, siphon activity and movement behaviours of a tellinid bivalve, Macomona liliana (Iredale, 1915), were affected by thin surface layers of mud (1–4 mm) and the incorporation of mud into surface (0–2 cm) sediment. Time-lapse photography and porewater pressure sensors were used to characterise changes in behaviour before and after mud addition. Mud addition modified the sediment matrix which had an immediate effect on M. liliana behaviour; significantly affecting the rates of feeding and the degree of porewater pressurisation during feeding events. Surface activity indicated maintenance and clearance of established burrow structures and increased ventilation. Ultimately, subtle modifications in behaviour and sediment hydraulic conductivity may have consequences for nutrient exchange and benthic-pelagic coupling. Our results emphasise the need to consider the impacts of low level stressors when they affect the behaviour of structurally important species.


Marine Ecology Progress Series | 2011

Simplifying the complex: an ‘Ecosystem Principles Approach’ to goods and services management in marine coastal ecosystems

Michael Townsend; Simon F. Thrush; M. J. Carbines


Ecological Indicators | 2013

Tracking environmental stress gradients using three biotic integrity indices: Advantages of a locally-developed traits-based approach

Iván F. Rodil; Andrew M. Lohrer; Judi E. Hewitt; Michael Townsend; Simon F. Thrush; M. Carbines


Ecosystem services | 2014

Overcoming the challenges of data scarcity in mapping marine ecosystem service potential

Michael Townsend; Simon F. Thrush; Andrew M. Lohrer; Judi E. Hewitt; Carolyn J. Lundquist; Megan Carbines; Malene Felsing

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Andrew M. Lohrer

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

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Simon F. Thrush

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

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Nick Hanley

University of St Andrews

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Katie Cartner

National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research

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