A watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton

A WATERY ARMS RACE: ATTACK AND DEFENCE MECHANISMS IN THE MARINE PLANKTONVictor Smetacek,Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Am Handelshafen 12,27570 Bremerhaven, Germany,E-mail: vsmetacek@awi-bremerhaven.deThe seasonal cycle of plankton is characterised by the wax and wane of a m...

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Main Author: Smetacek, Victor
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2004
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Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/11427/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.21881
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spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:11427 2023-09-05T13:11:38+02:00 A watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton Smetacek, Victor 2004 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/11427/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.21881 unknown Smetacek, V. (2004) A watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton , Invited Introductory Lecture, XI nternational Symposium on Marine Natural Products, 4-9 Sept., Sorrento, Italy. . hdl:10013/epic.21881 EPIC3Invited Introductory Lecture, XI nternational Symposium on Marine Natural Products, 4-9 Sept., Sorrento, Italy. Conference notRev 2004 ftawi 2023-08-22T19:49:16Z A WATERY ARMS RACE: ATTACK AND DEFENCE MECHANISMS IN THE MARINE PLANKTONVictor Smetacek,Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Am Handelshafen 12,27570 Bremerhaven, Germany,E-mail: vsmetacek@awi-bremerhaven.deThe seasonal cycle of plankton is characterised by the wax and wane of a myriad species which replace each other in the surface layer at time scales of a few weeks. Although this universal phenomenon has been known since about 150 years, a causal understanding of the factors driving this species succession has yet to be developed. This is partly due to the fact that plankton ecology has been traditionally based on the bottom-up or food-chain approach in which the structure of the ecosystem is described in terms of summary parameters that lump species together on the basis of their functional role in the system. This approach can not explain why populations of the various species appear when and where they do and why some species, but not others, dominate the assemblage at certain times of the year. A mechanistic understanding of the factors shaping the species composition of the plankton is, however, a prerequisite to modelling food-web structure and biogeochemical cycles because these are strongly influenced by the properties of the dominant or key species.In contrast to terrestrial ecosystems, species-specific interactions amongst plankton organisms based on attack and defence systems between predators, parasitoids and pathogens and their potential prey or hosts have not received much attention so far. Indeed, only a few examples of such interactions are reported in the literature 1, 2. Since most organisms in the plankton are eventually eaten, one can expect a strong selection for mechanisms that reduce mortality within species populations3. Defence mechanisms can range from mechanical and behavioural to various types of chemical warfare and dedicated studies of the arms race in the plankton are likely to reveal many types of previously unsuspected defence strategies involving chemical ... Conference Object Alfred Wegener Institute Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description A WATERY ARMS RACE: ATTACK AND DEFENCE MECHANISMS IN THE MARINE PLANKTONVictor Smetacek,Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research, Am Handelshafen 12,27570 Bremerhaven, Germany,E-mail: vsmetacek@awi-bremerhaven.deThe seasonal cycle of plankton is characterised by the wax and wane of a myriad species which replace each other in the surface layer at time scales of a few weeks. Although this universal phenomenon has been known since about 150 years, a causal understanding of the factors driving this species succession has yet to be developed. This is partly due to the fact that plankton ecology has been traditionally based on the bottom-up or food-chain approach in which the structure of the ecosystem is described in terms of summary parameters that lump species together on the basis of their functional role in the system. This approach can not explain why populations of the various species appear when and where they do and why some species, but not others, dominate the assemblage at certain times of the year. A mechanistic understanding of the factors shaping the species composition of the plankton is, however, a prerequisite to modelling food-web structure and biogeochemical cycles because these are strongly influenced by the properties of the dominant or key species.In contrast to terrestrial ecosystems, species-specific interactions amongst plankton organisms based on attack and defence systems between predators, parasitoids and pathogens and their potential prey or hosts have not received much attention so far. Indeed, only a few examples of such interactions are reported in the literature 1, 2. Since most organisms in the plankton are eventually eaten, one can expect a strong selection for mechanisms that reduce mortality within species populations3. Defence mechanisms can range from mechanical and behavioural to various types of chemical warfare and dedicated studies of the arms race in the plankton are likely to reveal many types of previously unsuspected defence strategies involving chemical ...
format Conference Object
author Smetacek, Victor
spellingShingle Smetacek, Victor
A watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton
author_facet Smetacek, Victor
author_sort Smetacek, Victor
title A watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton
title_short A watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton
title_full A watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton
title_fullStr A watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton
title_full_unstemmed A watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton
title_sort watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton
publishDate 2004
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/11427/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.21881
genre Alfred Wegener Institute
genre_facet Alfred Wegener Institute
op_source EPIC3Invited Introductory Lecture, XI nternational Symposium on Marine Natural Products, 4-9 Sept., Sorrento, Italy.
op_relation Smetacek, V. (2004) A watery arms race: attack and defence mechanisms in the marine plankton , Invited Introductory Lecture, XI nternational Symposium on Marine Natural Products, 4-9 Sept., Sorrento, Italy. . hdl:10013/epic.21881
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