The large scale impact of offshore wind farm structures on pelagic primary productivity in the southern North Sea
Kaela Slavik, Carsten Lemmen, Wenyan Zhang, Onur Kerimoglu, Knut, Klingbeil, Kai W. Wirtz

TL;DR
This study models how offshore wind farm structures, especially mussel accumulation, may significantly increase regional pelagic primary productivity in the southern North Sea, affecting ecosystem functioning.
Contribution
It introduces a modular coupling modeling approach to assess large-scale ecosystem impacts of offshore wind farms, focusing on primary productivity changes.
Findings
Potential 8% increase in annual primary productivity within wind farm areas
Daily productivity can increase by similar magnitude far from wind farms
Effective modeling framework for large-scale environmental impact assessment
Abstract
The increasing demand for renewable energy is projected to result in a 40-fold increase in offshore wind electricity in the European Union by 2030. Despite a great number of local impact studies for selected marine populations, the regional ecosystem impacts of offshore wind farm structures are not yet well assessed nor understood. Our study investigates whether the accumulation of epifauna, dominated by the filter feeder Mytilus edulis (blue mussel), on turbine structures affects pelagic primary productivity and ecosystem functioning in the southern North Sea. We estimate the anthropogenically increased potential distribution based on the current projections of turbine locations and reported patterns of M. edulis settlement. This distribution is integrated through the Modular Coupling System for Shelves and Coasts to state-of-the-art hydrodynamic and ecosystem models. Our simulations…
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