人造建筑退役对全球海洋生态系统影响的证据:系统地图

IF 4.3 3区 材料科学 Q1 ENGINEERING, ELECTRICAL & ELECTRONIC
Anaëlle J Lemasson, Paul J Somerfield, Michaela Schratzberger, Caroline Louise McNeill, Joana Nunes, Christine Pascoe, Stephen C L Watson, Murray S A Thompson, Elena Couce, Antony M Knights
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:许多海洋人工结构(MMS),如油气平台或海上风力涡轮机,都已接近 "寿命终点",需要退役。目前,对 MMS 退役影响的有限了解限制了对替代管理可能性的考虑,在世界上的某些地区,完全拆除往往是唯一的选择。本实证资料库描述了海洋军事制导系统在运行期间和停止运行后对生态系统的影响,以期为可能的退役决策提供信息:用于绘制该地图的规程已事先公布。截至 2021 年初,我们使用三个书目数据库、十个专业组织网站或资料库以及一个搜索引擎对已出版的英文文献进行了系统搜索。共发现 15,697 篇文章可能与我们的研究问题相关,其中 2,230 篇经过全文筛选。其中有 860 篇文章符合所有预设的资格标准。通过对文献综述中的参考文献进行 "滚雪球式 "搜索,又发现了 119 篇文章。最终数据库包含 979 篇文章。对于所收录的每篇文章,我们都提取了相关关键变量的元数据,并将其编码到数据库中:绝大多数符合条件的文章都与 MMS 的存在有关(96.2%),只有 5.8% 的文章考虑了退役问题。总体而言,文章主要涉及人工鱼礁(占所有文章的 51.5%),但也越来越多地涉及石油和天然气(22%)、沉船(15.1%)和海上风电(13.1%)。研究分布在全球各地,但大多数集中在美国、欧洲的单一国家、澳大利亚、巴西、中国和以色列;25 项研究跨越多个国家。因此,大部分研究集中在北大西洋(包括墨西哥湾、北海和地中海)和北太平洋。另有 12 项研究涉及全球范围。大多数研究报告的对象是鱼类(53%)和无脊椎动物(41%),并且不成比例地侧重于生物(81%)和生态(48%)影响。物理化学影响(13%)、生境影响(7%)、社会文化影响(7%)、经济影响(4%)和功能影响(8%)受到的关注较少。自约 2012 年以来,退役研究的数量一直在增加,但仍明显偏低。但仍明显偏低。研究主要集中在美国(墨西哥湾)和北欧(北海)的石油天然气基础设施,涵盖 9 种不同的退役方案:这份系统性地图是同类地图中的第一份,它揭示了与海洋中存在的海洋监测系统及其影响有关的大量同行评审证据,但在生物和生态结果方面比在非生物和社会经济结果方面有相当大的偏差。地图显示,退役影响的直接证据极为有限,这可能至少部分是由于国际政策阻止考虑除完全清除之外的一系列退役方案。尽管自 20 世纪 70 年代初以来,有关 MMS 影响的证据持续成倍增长,但该地图揭示了在制定考虑环境、社会和经济影响的退役方案时,在支持最佳实践的证据方面存在关键差距。需要相关证据来加深对这些领域的理解,并确保退役方案能带来最佳的生态系统结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Evidence for the effects of decommissioning man-made structures on marine ecosystems globally: a systematic map.

Background: Many marine man-made structures (MMS), such as oil and gas platforms or offshore wind turbines, are nearing their 'end-of-life' and require decommissioning. Limited understanding of MMS decommissioning effects currently restricts the consideration of alternative management possibilities, often leaving complete removal as the only option in certain parts of the world. This evidence-base describes the ecosystem effects of marine MMS whilst in place and following cessation of operations, with a view to informing decision-making related to their potential decommissioning.

Method: The protocol used to create this map was published a priori. Systematic searches of published, literature in English were conducted using three bibliographic databases, ten specialist organisational websites or repositories, and one search engine, up to early 2021. A total of 15,697 unique articles were identified as potentially relevant to our research questions, of which 2,230 were screened at the full-text level. Of that subset, 860 articles met all pre-defined eligibility criteria. A further 119 articles were identified through "snowballing" of references from literature reviews. The final database consists of 979 articles. For each article included, metadata were extracted for key variables of interest and coded into a database.

Review findings: The vast majority of eligible articles related to the presence of MMS (96.2%), while just 5.8% considered decommissioning. Overall, articles mainly considered artificial reefs (51.5% of all articles) but increasingly oil and gas (22%), shipwrecks (15.1%) and offshore wind (13.1%). Studies were distributed globally, but the majority focused on the United States, single countries within Europe, Australia, Brazil, China, and Israel; 25 studies spanned multiple countries. Consequently, the bulk of the studies focused on the North Atlantic (incl. Gulf of Mexico, North Sea, and Mediterranean Sea) and North Pacific Oceans. A further 12 studies had a global scope. Studies in majority reported on fish (53%) and invertebrates (41%), and were disproportionately focused on biological (81%) and ecological (48%) impacts. Physico-chemical (13%), habitat (7%), socio-cultural (7%), economic (4%) and functional (8%) outcomes have received less attention. The number of decommissioning studies has been increasing since ca. 2012 but remains noticeably low. Studies mostly focus on oil and gas infrastructures in the USA (Gulf of Mexico) and Northern Europe (North Sea), covering 9 different decommissioning options.

Conclusions: This systematic map, the first of its kind, reveals a substantial body of peer-reviewed evidence relating to the presence of MMS in the sea and their impacts, but with considerable bias toward biological and ecological outcomes over abiotic and socio-economic outcomes. The map reveals extremely limited direct evidence of decommissioning effects, likely driven at least in part by international policy preventing consideration of a range of decommissioning options beyond complete removal. Despite evidence of MMS impacts continuing to grow exponentially since the early 1970s, this map reveals key gaps in evidence to support best practice in developing decommissioning options that consider environmental, social and economic effects. Relevant evidence is required to generate greater understanding in those areas and ensure decommissioning options deliver optimal ecosystem outcomes.

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CiteScore
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