scholarly journals Coral Reefs in Crisis: The Reliability of Deep-Time Food Web Reconstructions as Analogs for the Present

Author(s):  
Peter D. Roopnarine ◽  
Ashley A. Dineen
Keyword(s):  
Food Web ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ina Schaefer ◽  
Tancredi Caruso

Abstract The early evolution of ecosystems in Palaeozoic soils remains poorly understood because the fossil record is sparse, despite the preservation of soil microarthropods already from the Early Devonian (~410 Mya). The soil food web plays a key role in the functioning of ecosystems and its organisms currently express traits that have evolved over 400 my. Here, we conducted a phylogenetic trait analysis of a major soil animal group (Oribatida) to reveal the deep time story of the soil food web. We conclude that this group, central to the trophic structure of the soil food web, diversified in the early Paleozoic and resulted in functionally complex food webs by the late Devonian. The evolution of body size, form, and an astonishing trophic diversity demonstrates that the soil food web was as structured as current food webs already in the Devonian, facilitating the establishment of higher plants in the late Paleozoic.


el–Hayah ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 35
Author(s):  
Nanik Retno Buwono ◽  
Nur Lailatul Fitri

Echinoderms is a component of biodiversity in the coral reefs. Echinoderms play an important role in ecosystem of coral reefs especially in food web, generally as predators and detritivors. This report aims to understand composition and density relative of fauna echinoderms on the Balekambang beach. The Transect line method were used and data retrieval was conducted at three stations. The result showed that echinoderms found in Balekambang beach consists of 7 species that are included in three classes, they were <em>Phyllachantus imperialis</em>, <em>Tripneustes gratilla</em>, <em>Diadema setosum</em>, <em>Clypeaster</em> <em>reticulatus</em> (Class Echinoidea), <em>Archaster typicus</em> (Class Asteroidea), <em>Ophiotrix fragilis</em> and <em>Macrophiothrix belii</em> (Class Ophiuroidea). The highest abundance of echinoderms on the station where located in the mangrove area which was dominated by <em>Archaster typicus</em>. The diversity of echinoderms on Balekambang beach were moderate category. The observations of chemical and physics parameters of the aquatic environment and the substrate obtained quite optimal for life of Echinoderms


2017 ◽  
Vol 88 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Houk ◽  
J. Cuetos-Bueno ◽  
A. M. Kerr ◽  
K. McCann

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter D. Roopnarine ◽  
Ashley A. Dineen

AbstractOngoing anthropogenic alterations of the biosphere have shifted emphasis in conservation biology from individual species to entire ecosystems. Modern measures of ecosystem change, however, lack the extended temporal scales necessary to forecast future change under increasingly stressful environmental conditions. Accordingly, the assessment and reconstruction of ecosystem dynamics during previous intervals of environmental stress and climate change in deep time has garnered increasing attention. The nature of the fossil record, though, raises questions about the difficulty of reconstructing paleocommunity and paleoecosystem-level dynamics. In this study, we assess the reliability of such reconstructions by simulating the fossilization of a highly threatened and disturbed modern ecosystem, a Caribbean coral reef. Using a high-resolution coral reef food web from Jamaica, we compare system structures of the modern and simulated fossil reefs, including guild richness and evenness, trophic level distribution, predator dietary breadth, food chain lengths, and modularity. Results indicate that despite the loss of species, guilds, and trophospecies interactions, particularly zooplankton and other soft-bodied organisms, the overall guild diversity, structure, and modularity of the reef ecosystem remained intact. These results have important implications for the integrity of fossil food web studies and coral reef conservation, demonstrating that fossil reef communities can be used to understand reef community dynamics during past regimes of environmental change.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document