Organisation in the pelagic ecosystem |
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Authors: | Dr. T. Platt K. Denman |
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Affiliation: | (1) Marine Ecology Laboratory, Bedford Institute of Oceanography, B2Y 4A2 Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada |
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Abstract: | A continuous, steady-state theory has been developed for the abundance of organisms in the pelagic ecosystem as a function of their body weight. It is based on accepted relationships for the weight-dependence of metabolism and growth, in a context where individual organisms are assigned to one of a series of size classes for which the nominal weights increase in a geometric progression. Analysis of the biomass flow in such a representation leads to the conclusion that, in the steady state, the total biomass in any given size class decreases in a regular manner with increasing size. Explicitly,b(w2)/b(w1)~(w2/w1)0.22, whereb(w2) andb(w1) are the total biomasses in the size classes characterised by weightsw2 andw1, respectively. The exponent (–0.22) represents a balance between catabolism and anabolism, based on published reviews concerning the revelant parameters. This result agrees favourably with data collected by other workers in the subtropical oceans. The theory can be used to draw conclusions about the functional dynamics of the pelagic ecosystem, such as community respiration and rate of biomass flow. |
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