C. Jammar, A. Reynés-Cardona, J. Vanaverbeke, N. Lefaible, T. Moens, S. Degraer, and U. Braeckman (2024)
Decadal trends in macrobenthic communities in offshore wind farms: Disentangling turbine and climate effects
Journal of Sea Research, 203(102557):1-14.
We present results of a study covering 13 years of data (2008–2020), investigating for the first time the combined
impacts of offshore windfarm (OWF) turbine-related and climate-related variables on soft-sediment macrobenthic
communities in the Southern North Sea, focusing on two Belgian OWFs, Belwind and C-Power. We
hypothesized that both turbine presence alongside climate change would affect macrobenthos in the long-term.
Our analysis revealed that climate variables, particularly sea surface temperature (SST) influenced macrobenthos
abundance, species richness and diversity. Species richness was additionally affected by the North Atlantic
Oscillation (NAO). While most community indices increased with rising SST, diversity declined with higher
temperatures. Our analysis supported that the already known short-term (max. 3 years) turbine-related impacts
are consistent through time (13 years). Sediments near turbines and in deeper waters were richer in organic
matter, characterized by finer sand, and supported more enriched soft-sediment communities compared to locations
further away. A transition from the originally prevailing Nephtys cirrosa community towards a more
diverse macrobenthic community was observed near the turbines. Our study emphasizes the need for long-term
studies and the importance of distinguishing turbine presence from climate change effects when assessing the
impacts of OWFs on marine ecosystems.
Macrobenthos, Climate, Long-term, Marine ecology, Offshore wind farms, Renewable energy, Turbine
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