Concepts and approaches for marine ecosystem research with reference to the tropics
Authored by M Wolff
Date Published: 2002
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Platforms:
EcoSim
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Abstract
The present article gives an overview on the leading concepts and
modelling approaches for marine ecosystems' research including (1) The
trophodynamic theory of pelagic ecosystems, (2) Compartment/network
models, (3) Mesocosm experiments and (4) Individual based modelling
approaches and virtual ecosystems (VE). The main research questions
addressed, as well as the potential and limits of each approach, are
summarized and discussed and it is shown how the concept of ecosystem
has changed over time. Aquatic biomas spectra (derived from the theory
of pelagic ecosystems) can give insight into the trophic structure of
different systems, and can show how organism sizes are distributed
within the system and how different size groups participate in the
system's metabolism and production. Compartment/network models allow for
a more detailed description of the trophic structure of ecosystems and
of the energy/biomass fluxes through the explicit modelling of P/B-and
food consumption rates and biomasses for each system compartment.
Moreover, system indices for a characterization and comparison with
other systems can be obtained such as average trophic efficiency, energy
throughput, and degree of connectivity, degree of maturity, and others.
Recent dynamic extensions of trophic network models allow for exploring
past and future impacts of fishing and environmental disturbances as
well as to explore policies such as marine protected areas. Mesocosm
experiments address a multitude of questions related to aquatic
processes (i.e. primary production, grazing, predation, energy transfer
between trophic levels etc.) and the behaviour of organisms (i.e.
growth, migration, response to contaminants etc.) under semi-natural
conditions. As processes within mesocosms often differ in rate and
magnitude from those occurring in nature, mesocosms should be viewed as
large in vitro experiments designed to test selected components of the
ecosystem and not as an attempt to enclose a multitude of interacting
processes. Models that use individual organisms as units can provide
insight into the causes of natural variability within populations
(growth, phenotype, behaviour) and into the role of intraspecific
variation for interspecific processes, succession, and feedback
mechanisms. In biological oceanography, interdisciplinary research is
increasingly using ``Virtual Ecosystems{''} to simulate non-linear
interactions between the dynamics of fluctuating ocean circulation, the
physics of air-sea interaction, turbulence and optics, biogeochemistry, and the physiology and behaviour of plankton, which can be compared with
real observations. The different approaches available for the analysis
of aquatic ecosystems should be seen as complementary ways for the
description and understanding of ecosystems. The modem view of marine
ecosystems, as has emerged from ecosystem analysis over the last
decades, is that of a composite of loosely coupled subsystems of
desynchron dynamics which through their combined action maintain the
fundamental structure and function of the whole.
Tags
plankton
Costa-rica
Benthic communities
Organisms
Size distributions
Mesocosm
Intertidal community structure
Trophic flow model
Exploited
ecosystems
Body
size