The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

St Andrews scientists awarded £700,000 to study ecosystems.

Scientists at St Andrews are collaborat­ing with internatio­nal team

- AILEEN ROBERTSON arobertson@thecourier.co.uk

Scientists at St Andrews University have been awarded £700,000 to investigat­e the impact of man-made structures – and their removal – on the North Sea’s marine environmen­t.

The Sea Mammal Research Unit (SMRU) is collaborat­ing with an internatio­nal team of experts on the EcoSTAR (Ecosystem-level importance of STructures as Artificial Reefs) programme.

Lead researcher Dr Debbie Russell from the SMRU said the findings would be combined with existing ecological and environmen­tal data and knowledge of invertebra­tes, fish, food webs and fisheries, to predict the impacts of structures on the whole ecosystem.

“This will allow the prediction of the impacts of the removal of old structures, such as oil and gas platforms, and addition of new structures – such as offshore wind turbines – on the marine ecosystem and implicatio­ns for commercial fisheries,” she said.

“The findings of EcoSTAR will facilitate the developmen­t of environmen­tally sustainabl­e management strategies for the North Sea as a whole, and specifical­ly with regards to the addition and removal of these structures.”

EcoSTAR will set out to increase understand­ing of the impacts of structures from the bottom of the food chain to the top.

As one of the most industrial­ised marine environmen­ts on the planet, the North Sea contains thousands of man-made structures including oil and gas platforms, pipelines, subsea cable routes and marinerene­wable energy installati­ons.

There is mounting evidence that the effects of such structures on the local marine environmen­t are complex and may depend on age, type, and operationa­l status.

Installati­on can disturb marine mammals but, once in place, they can host artificial reefs supporting diverse communitie­s of marine life.

Current legislatio­n requires that man-made structures (MMS) in the North Sea should be removed from the marine environmen­t after their operationa­l lifespan is complete.

EcoSTAR is one of seven projects being funded by the Natural Environmen­t Research Council’s INfluence of man-made Structures In The Ecosystem (INSITE) programme.

“This will allow the prediction of the impacts of the removal of old structures... and addition of new structures on the marine ecosystem. DR DEBBIE RUSSELL

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