Otros
Mare Incognitum: A Glimpse into Future Plankton Diversity and Ecology Research
Fecha
2017-01-01Registro en:
Frontiers In Marine Science. Lausanne: Frontiers Media Sa, v. 4, 9 p., 2017.
10.3389/fmars.2017.00068
WOS:000457690600068
Autor
AZTI
Swiss Fed Inst Technol
UPMC Univ Paris 06
Univ Arkansas
Univ Montpellier
Museum Natl Hist Nat
CSIC
Alfred Wegener Inst Polar & Marine Res
Ctr Oceanog Gijon
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Bermuda Inst Ocean Sci
Univ Salento
Institución
Resumen
With global climate change altering marine ecosystems, research on plankton ecology is likely to navigate uncharted seas. Yet, a staggering wealth of new plankton observations, integrated with recent advances in marine ecosystem modeling, may shed light on marine ecosystem structure and functioning. A EuroMarine foresight workshop on the Impact of climate change on the distribution of plankton functional and phylogenetic diversity (PlankDiv) identified five grand challenges for future plankton diversity and macroecology research: (1) What can we learn about plankton communities from the new wealth of high-throughput omics data? (2) What is the link between plankton diversity and ecosystem function? (3) How can species distribution models be adapted to represent plankton biogeography? (4) How will plankton biogeography be altered due to anthropogenic climate change? and (5) Can a new unifying theory of macroecology be developed based on plankton ecology studies? In this review, we discuss potential future avenues to address these questions, and challenges that need to be tackled along the way.