Thursday, 27 October 2011

Marine ecosystems

Human-dominated marine ecosystems are experiencing accelerating loss of populations and species, with largely unknown consequences. Local experiments, long-term regional time series, and global fisheries data to test how biodiversity loss affects marine ecosystem services across temporal and spatial scales. Overall, rates of resource collapse increased and recovery potential, stability, and water quality decreased exponentially with declining diversity. Restoration of biodiversity, in contrast, increased productivity fourfold and decreased variability by 21%, on average. We conclude that marine biodiversity loss is increasingly impairing the ocean's capacity to provide food, maintain water quality, and recover from perturbations. Yet available data suggest that at this point, these trends are still reversible.

Worm, B  (2006) Impacts of Biodiversity Loss on Ocean Ecosystem Services. Science; 314(5800): 787-790  Sciencemag Source ID 5314

No comments:

Post a Comment