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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Princeton :Princeton University Press,
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: No detailed description available for "A Theory of Global Biodiversity (MPB-60)".
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (230 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781400890231
    Series Statement: Monographs in Population Biology Series ; v.60
    DDC: 333.95
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Introduction -- 1.1. Integrating Land and Sea -- 1.2. A Brief History of Biodiversity Research -- 1.3. Goals and Structure of This Book -- 2. Observed Patterns of Global Biodiversity -- 2.1. Marine Coastal Biodiversity -- 2.2. Marine Pelagic Biodiversity -- 2.3. Deep-Sea Biodiversity -- 2.4. Terrestrial Biodiversity -- 2.5. Changes in Biodiversity Patterns through Time -- 2.6. Robustness of Documented Biodiversity Patterns -- 2.7. Synthesis -- 3. Drivers and Predictors of Global Biodiversity -- 3.1. Hypothesized Drivers of Diversity -- 3.2. Spatial and Temporal Scale -- 3.3. Empirical Predictors of Diversity -- 3.4. Synthesis -- 4. Developing a Theory of Global Biodiversity -- 4.1. Basic Neutral Theory -- 4.2. Implementation in Forward and Coalescence Mode -- 4.3. Including Metabolic Theory -- 4.4. Including Habitat Area and Productivity -- 4.5. Including Temperature Niches -- 4.6. Discussion and Comparison with Other Theory -- 5. Predicting Global Biodiversity Patterns from Theory -- 5.1. Fitting Theoretical Predictions to Empirical Data -- 5.2. Ectotherms versus Endotherms -- 5.3. Including Niches -- 5.4. Synthesis -- 6. Conservation Applications -- 6.1. Global Biodiversity Hotspots and Conservation Priorities -- 6.2. Observed Biodiversity Change and Its Drivers -- 6.3. Projecting Biodiversity Change from Theory -- 6.4. The Future of Biodiversity -- 7. Conclusions -- 7.1. Summary of Major Findings -- 7.2. Ecological Theory -- 7.3. A Niche for Neutrality? -- 7.4. Spatial Scale -- 7.5. Ecological versus Evolutionary Time -- 7.6. Applications -- 7.7. Limitations -- 7.8. Final Outlook -- References -- Index.
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  • 2
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Yesson, Chris; Taylor, Michelle L; Tittensor, Derek P; Davies, Andrew; Guinotte, John M; Baco, Amy R; Black, Julie; Hall-Spencer, Jason M; Rogers, Alex David (2012): Global habitat suitability of cold-water octocorals. Journal of Biogeography, 39(7), 1278-1292, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2699.2011.02681.x
    Publication Date: 2024-02-17
    Description: This dataset consists of global raster maps indicating the habitat suitability for 7 suborders of cold water octocorals (Octocorallia found deeper than 50m). Maps present a relative habitat suitability index ranging from 0 (unsuitable) to 100 (highly suitable). Two maps are provided for each suborder (Alcyoniina, Calcaxonia, Holaxonia, Scleraxonia, Sessiliflorae, Stolonifera, and Subselliflorae). A publicly accessable low resolution map (grid size 10x10 arc-minutes) and a restricted access high resolution map (grid size 30x30 arc-seconds). Maps are geotiff format incorporating LZW compression to reduce file size. Please contact the corresponding author (Chris Yesson) for access to the high resolution data.
    Keywords: CoralFISH; Ecosystem based management of corals, fish and fisheries in the deep waters of Europe and beyond
    Type: Dataset
    Format: unknown
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2016-08-25
    Description: Climate change has significant implications for biodiversity and ecosystems. With slow progress towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions, climate engineering (or ‘geoengineering’) is receiving increasing attention for its potential to limit anthropogenic climate change and its damaging effects. Proposed techniques, such as ocean fertilization for carbon dioxide removal or stratospheric sulfate injections to reduce incoming solar radiation, would significantly alter atmospheric, terrestrial and marine environments, yet potential side-effects of their implementation for ecosystems and biodiversity have received little attention. A literature review was carried out to identify details of the potential ecological effects of climate engineering techniques. A group of biodiversity and environmental change researchers then employed a modified Delphi expert consultation technique to evaluate this evidence and prioritize the effects based on the relative importance of, and scientific understanding about, their biodiversity and ecosystem consequences. The key issues and knowledge gaps are used to shape a discussion of the biodiversity and ecosystem implications of climate engineering, including novel climatic conditions, alterations to marine systems and substantial terrestrial habitat change. This review highlights several current research priorities in which the climate engineering context is crucial to consider, as well as identifying some novel topics for ecological investigation.
    Repository Name: EPIC Alfred Wegener Institut
    Type: Article , isiRev
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2021-04-23
    Description: Climate change has significant implications for biodiversity and ecosystems. With slow progress towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions, climate engineering (or ‘geoengineering’) is receiving increasing attention for its potential to limit anthropogenic climate change and its damaging effects. Proposed techniques, such as ocean fertilization for carbon dioxide removal or stratospheric sulfate injections to reduce incoming solar radiation, would significantly alter atmospheric, terrestrial and marine environments, yet potential side-effects of their implementation for ecosystems and biodiversity have received little attention. A literature review was carried out to identify details of the potential ecological effects of climate engineering techniques. A group of biodiversity and environmental change researchers then employed a modified Delphi expert consultation technique to evaluate this evidence and prioritize the effects based on the relative importance of, and scientific understanding about, their biodiversity and ecosystem consequences. The key issues and knowledge gaps are used to shape a discussion of the biodiversity and ecosystem implications of climate engineering, including novel climatic conditions, alterations to marine systems and substantial terrestrial habitat change. This review highlights several current research priorities in which the climate engineering context is crucial to consider, as well as identifying some novel topics for ecological investigation.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2023-02-08
    Description: Considerable effort is being deployed to predict the impacts of climate change and anthropogenic activities on the ocean's biophysical environment, biodiversity, and natural resources to better understand how marine ecosystems and provided services to humans are likely to change and explore alternative pathways and options. We present an updated version of EcoOcean (v2), a spatial-temporal ecosystem modeling complex of the global ocean that spans food-web dynamics from primary producers to top predators. Advancements include an enhanced ability to reproduce spatial-temporal ecosystem dynamics by linking species productivity, distributions, and trophic interactions to the impacts of climate change and worldwide fisheries. The updated modeling platform is used to simulate past and future scenarios of change, where we quantify the impacts of alternative configurations of the ecological model, responses to climate-change scenarios, and the additional impacts of fishing. Climate-change scenarios are obtained from two Earth-System Models (ESMs, GFDL-ESM2M, and IPSL-CMA5-LR) and two contrasting emission pathways (RCPs 2.6 and 8.5) for historical (1950-2005) and future (2006-2100) periods. Standardized ecological indicators and biomasses of selected species groups are used to compare simulations. Results show how future ecological trajectories are sensitive to alternative configurations of EcoOcean, and yield moderate differences when looking at ecological indicators and larger differences for biomasses of species groups. Ecological trajectories are also sensitive to environmental drivers from alternative ESM outputs and RCPs, and show spatial variability and more severe changes when IPSL and RCP 8.5 are used. Under a non-fishing configuration, larger organisms show decreasing trends, while smaller organisms show mixed or increasing results. Fishing intensifies the negative effects predicted by climate change, again stronger under IPSL and RCP 8.5, which results in stronger biomass declines for species already losing under climate change, or dampened positive impacts for those increasing. Several species groups that win under climate change become losers under combined impacts, while only a few (small benthopelagic fish and cephalopods) species are projected to show positive biomass changes under cumulative impacts. EcoOcean v2 can contribute to the quantification of cumulative impact assessments of multiple stressors and of plausible ocean-based solutions to prevent, mitigate and adapt to global change.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: Climate change is impacting virtually all marine life. Adaptation strategies will require a robust understanding of the risks to species and ecosystems and how those propagate to human societies. We develop a unified and spatially explicit index to comprehensively evaluate the climate risks to marine life. Under high emissions (SSP5-8.5), almost 90% of similar to 25,000 species are at high or critical risk, with species at risk across 85% of their native distributions. One tenth of the ocean contains ecosystems where the aggregated climate risk, endemism and extinction threat of their constituent species are high. Climate change poses the greatest risk for exploited species in low-income countries with a high dependence on fisheries. Mitigating emissions (SSP1-2.6) reduces the risk for virtually all species (98.2%), enhances ecosystem stability and disproportionately benefits food-insecure populations in low-income countries. Our climate risk assessment can help prioritize vulnerable species and ecosystems for climate-adapted marine conservation and fisheries management efforts.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-06-06
    Description: We review the current knowledge of the biodiversity of the ocean as well as the levels of decline and threat for species and habitats. The lack of understanding of the distribution of life in the ocean is identified as a significant barrier to restoring its biodiversity and health. We explore why the science of taxonomy has failed to deliver knowledge of what species are present in the ocean, how they are distributed and how they are responding to global and regional to local anthropogenic pressures. This failure prevents nations from meeting their international commitments to conserve marine biodiversity with the results that investment in taxonomy has declined in many countries. We explore a range of new technologies and approaches for discovery of marine species and their detection and monitoring. These include: imaging methods, molecular approaches, active and passive acoustics, the use of interconnected databases and citizen science. Whilst no one method is suitable for discovering or detecting all groups of organisms many are complementary and have been combined to give a more complete picture of biodiversity in marine ecosystems. We conclude that integrated approaches represent the best way forwards for accelerating species discovery, description and biodiversity assessment. Examples of integrated taxonomic approaches are identified from terrestrial ecosystems. Such integrated taxonomic approaches require the adoption of cybertaxonomy approaches and will be boosted by new autonomous sampling platforms and development of machine-speed exchange of digital information between databases.
    Type: Book chapter , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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