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Citation. Naeem, S. 2006. Expanding scales in biodiversity-based research: challenges and solutions for marine systems. MARINE ECOLOGY-PROGRESS SERIES 311:273-283.
Abstract. As in terrestrial biodiversity, human influences over marine biodiversity will alter the
way ecosystems contribute to biogeochemical or ecosystem processes. While many
studies have documented how alterations of terrestrial biology affect ecosystem
functioning, few studies have examined marine systems. The main challenge faced by
biodiversity and ecosystem functioning (BEF) research in marine ecology is dealing with
the large scales of marine systems and the logistical difficulties of attempting to conduct
the kinds of complex, combinatorial experiments that have been done in terrestrial
ecology. BioMERGE (Biotic Mechanisms of Ecosystem Regulation in the Global
Environment) has developed a framework for relating biodiversity, via biomass, to
ecosystem functioning and for employing extinction scenarios to explore the realm of
possible changes in ecosystem functioning that biodiversity loss could create. This
approach may find much utility in marine BEF research because it obviates the need for
complex experiments. I provide an overview of the issues, the framework, and some
directions marine ecology could take to further our understanding of the ecosystem
consequences of marine biodiversity loss.
Key words: Biodiversity · Ecosystem function · Marine · Extinction · Biogeochemistry