Aller au contenu. | Aller à la navigation

Outils personnels

    
Navigation
Vous êtes ici : Accueil / Bibliographie générale / Ecosystem Engineers in the Pelagic Realm: Alteration of Habitat by Species Ranging from Microbes to Jellyfish

Denise L Breitburg, Byron C Crump, John O Dabiri, and Charles L Gallegos (2010)

Ecosystem Engineers in the Pelagic Realm: Alteration of Habitat by Species Ranging from Microbes to Jellyfish

Integrative and Comparative Biology, 50(2):188-200.

Ecosystem engineers are species that alter the physical environment in ways that create new habitat or change the suitability of existing habitats for themselves or other organisms. In marine systems, much of the focus has been on species such as corals, oysters, and macrophytes that add physical structure to the environment, but organisms ranging from microbes to jellyfish and finfish that reside in the water column of oceans, estuaries, and coastal seas alter the chemical and physical environment both within the water column and on the benthos. By causing hypoxia, changing light regimes, and influencing physical mixing, these organisms may have as strong an effect as species that fall more clearly within the classical category of ecosystem engineer. In addition, planktonic species, such as jellyfish, may indirectly alter the physical environment through predator-mediated landscape structure. By creating spatial patterns of habitats that vary in their rates of mortality due to predation, planktonic predators may control spatial patterns and abundances of species that are the direct creators or modifiers of physical habitat.

ocean mixing, Biogeochemistry, recycling, scale

Actions sur le document

error while rendering collective.geo.kml.kmlbelowcontentviewlet
« Mai 2024 »
Mai
DiLuMaMeJeVeSa
1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031
Financement
Structures de recherche
Laboratoires associés