The marine biodiversity observation network plankton workshops : plankton ecosystem function, biodiversity, and forecasting—research requirements and applications

Grigoratou, Maria and Montes, Enrique and Richardson, Anthony and Everett, Jason and Acevedo-Trejos, Esteban and Anderson, Clarissa and Chen, Bingzhang and Guy-Haim, Tamar and Hinners, Jana and Lindemann, Christian and Garcia, Tatiane and Möller, Klas and Monteiro, Fanny and Neeley, Aimee and O’Brien, Todd and Palacz, Artur and Poulton, Alex and Prowe, Friederike and Rodríguez-Santiago, Aurea (2022) The marine biodiversity observation network plankton workshops : plankton ecosystem function, biodiversity, and forecasting—research requirements and applications. Limnology and Oceanography Bulletin, 31 (1). pp. 22-26. (https://doi.org/10.1002/lob.10479)

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Abstract

Plankton is a massive and phylogenetically diverse group of thousands of prokaryotes, protists (unicellular eukaryotic organisms), and metazoans (multicellular eukaryotic organisms; Fig. 1). Plankton functional diversity is at the core of various ecological processes, including productivity, carbon cycling and sequestration, nutrient cycling (Falkowski 2012), interspecies interactions, and food web dynamics and structure (D'Alelio et al. 2016). Through these functions, plankton play a critical role in the health of the coastal and open ocean and provide essential ecosystem services. Yet, at present, our understanding of plankton dynamics is insufficient to project how climate change and other human-driven impacts affect the functional diversity of plankton. That limits our ability to predict how critical ecosystem services will change in the future and develop strategies to adapt to these changes.