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Mussels as a Model System for Integrative Ecomechanics

pmid: 25195867
Mussels form dense aggregations that dominate temperate rocky shores, and they are key aquaculture species worldwide. Coastal environments are dynamic across a broad range of spatial and temporal scales, and their changing abiotic conditions affect mussel populations in a variety of ways, including altering their investments in structures, physiological processes, growth, and reproduction. Here, we describe four categories of ecomechanical models (biochemical, mechanical, energetic, and population) that we have developed to describe specific aspects of mussel biology, ranging from byssal attachment to energetics, population growth, and fitness. This review highlights how recent advances in these mechanistic models now allow us to link them together across molecular, material, organismal, and population scales of organization. This integrated ecomechanical approach provides explicit and sometimes novel predictions about how natural and farmed mussel populations will fare in changing climatic conditions.
- University of Palermo Italy
- University of Mary United States
- Washington State University United States
- University of California System United States
- University of California, Santa Barbara United States
Environmental Science and Management, Climate Change, Oceans and Seas, Plant Biology, Marine Biology, mussel foot proteins, Aquaculture, 333, tenacity, Theoretical, Models, Animals, Body Size, Life Below Water, Ecosystem, Population Density, Ecology, Reproduction, Models, Theoretical, byssus, fitness, Marine Biology & Hydrobiology, Biomechanical Phenomena, Bivalvia, dislodgment, dynamic energy budget
Environmental Science and Management, Climate Change, Oceans and Seas, Plant Biology, Marine Biology, mussel foot proteins, Aquaculture, 333, tenacity, Theoretical, Models, Animals, Body Size, Life Below Water, Ecosystem, Population Density, Ecology, Reproduction, Models, Theoretical, byssus, fitness, Marine Biology & Hydrobiology, Biomechanical Phenomena, Bivalvia, dislodgment, dynamic energy budget
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