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Bridging Food Webs, Ecosystem Metabolism, and Biogeochemistry Using Ecological Stoichiometry Theory

Although aquatic ecologists and biogeochemists are well aware of the crucial importance of ecosystem functions, i.e., how biota drive biogeochemical processes and vice-versa, linking these fields in conceptual models is still uncommon. Attempts to explain the variability in elemental cycling consequently miss an important biological component and thereby impede a comprehensive understanding of the underlying processes governing energy and matter flow and transformation. The fate of multiple chemical elements in ecosystems is strongly linked by biotic demand and uptake; thus, considering elemental stoichiometry is important for both biogeochemical and ecological research. Nonetheless, assessments of ecological stoichiometry (ES) often focus on the elemental content of biota rather than taking a more holistic view by examining both elemental pools and fluxes (e.g., organismal stoichiometry and ecosystem process rates). ES theory holds the promise to be a unifying concept to link across hierarchical scales of patterns and processes in ecology, but this has not been fully achieved. Therefore, we propose connecting the expertise of aquatic ecologists and biogeochemists with ES theory as a common currency to connect food webs, ecosystem metabolism, and biogeochemistry, as they are inherently concatenated by the transfer of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorous through biotic and abiotic nutrient transformation and fluxes. Several new studies exist that demonstrate the connections between food web ecology, biogeochemistry, and ecosystem metabolism. In addition to a general introduction into the topic, this paper presents examples of how these fields can be combined with a focus on ES. In this review, a series of concepts have guided the discussion: (1) changing biogeochemistry affects trophic interactions and ecosystem processes by altering the elemental ratios of key species and assemblages; (2) changing trophic dynamics influences the transformation and fluxes of matter across environmental boundaries; (3) changing ecosystem metabolism will alter the chemical diversity of the non-living environment. Finally, we propose that using ES to link nutrient cycling, trophic dynamics, and ecosystem metabolism would allow for a more holistic understanding of ecosystem functions in a changing environment.
- The Ohio State University at Marion United States
- Queen Mary University of London, The School of Biological and Chemical Sciences United Kingdom
- Helmholtz Institute for Functional Marine Biodiversity Germany
- Queen Mary University of London United Kingdom
- University System of Ohio United States
LAKE-MICHIGAN, MICROBIOLOGY, Earth sciences and geology, GULF-OF-MEXICO, FOREST STREAM, HETEROTROPHIC SEAWATER MESOCOSMS, 551, Microbiology, carbon quality, APPALACHIAN HEADWATER STREAM, LITTER BREAKDOWN RATES, ecosystem function, element cycling, MICROBIAL DYNAMICS, trophic interactions, ecological stoichiometry, energy transfer, FRESH-WATER, biology, Life sciences, QR1-502, Chemistry, ORGANIC-MATTER, Life sciences, biology, TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE, nutrient dynamics
LAKE-MICHIGAN, MICROBIOLOGY, Earth sciences and geology, GULF-OF-MEXICO, FOREST STREAM, HETEROTROPHIC SEAWATER MESOCOSMS, 551, Microbiology, carbon quality, APPALACHIAN HEADWATER STREAM, LITTER BREAKDOWN RATES, ecosystem function, element cycling, MICROBIAL DYNAMICS, trophic interactions, ecological stoichiometry, energy transfer, FRESH-WATER, biology, Life sciences, QR1-502, Chemistry, ORGANIC-MATTER, Life sciences, biology, TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENCE, nutrient dynamics
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