| Literature DB >> 32836347 |
Nabil Majdi1, Jenny M Schmid-Araya2, Walter Traunspurger1.
Abstract
Never heard of harpacticoids, ostracods, gastrotrichs or microturbellarians? This is no surprise, they are so tiny! Yet these taxa and many others more famous (nematodes, rotifers, or tardigrades) show complex behaviours and extraordinary physiologies that allow them to colonize inland waters worldwide. This exuberant fauna is better known as the meiofauna (or meiobenthos). Meiofaunal organisms have been fascinating study objects for zoologists since the seventeenth century and recent research has demonstrated their intermediate role in benthic food webs. This special issue highlights how meiofauna can help freshwater ecologists to describe and predict species distribution patterns, to assess production of biomass and trait functions relationships, as well as to examine the trophic links between microscopic and macroscopic worlds and to better understand species' resilience to environmental extremes. Overall, meiofaunal organisms are bridging scales, and as such they deserve better integration to develop more comprehensive concepts and theories in ecology. © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020.Entities:
Keywords: Body size; Distribution; Invertebrates; Meiobenthos; Trophic interactions
Year: 2020 PMID: 32836347 PMCID: PMC7250258 DOI: 10.1007/s10750-020-04301-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hydrobiologia ISSN: 0018-8158 Impact factor: 2.694
Fig. 1Some examples of freshwater meiofauna. A Nematode. B Microturbellarian. C Rotifer. D Tardigrade. E Gastrotrich.
Source: Photos courtesy of W. Traunspurger, J.P.S. Smith III, P.E. Schmid, N. Majdi and M. Balsamo, respectively
Fig. 2Yearly number of publications containing the words “meiofauna” OR “meiobenthos” over the period 2000–2018. Studies were distinguished as freshwater or marine
Top 10 words or word abbreviations used in the titles of publications on “meiofauna” OR “meiobenthos” over the period 2000–2018
| Freshwater | Marine | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Word | % | Word | % |
| stream | 3.24 | distribut | 2.49 |
| 2.92 | 2.33 | ||
| biofilm | 1.78 | sediment | 2.22 |
| 1.70 | sea | 2.03 | |
| 1.62 | beach | 1.78 | |
| lake | 1.62 | 1.70 | |
| freshwater | 1.46 | coast | 1.67 |
| river | 1.30 | sand | 1.62 |
| aquatic | 1.22 | benthic | 1.51 |
| structure | 1.14 | 1.48 | |
Words or word abbreviations are listed by decreasing order of their relative frequency of occurrence in the titles. Words like “meiofauna” OR “meiobenthos” are not regarded, as common English stop words and conjunctions. Words highlighted in bold are shared across both Top 10 lists. The search engine considered words reduced to their word stem, see also expanded word clouds on Fig. 3
Fig. 3Word clouds representing the 100 most frequent words contained in the titles of publications also containing the words “meiofauna” OR “meiobenthos” over the period 2000–2018. Word clouds specific to A: freshwater or B: marine studies were distinguished. Different font size and colour show different frequencies of occurrence (the greatest frequencies for dark, large font words). The different diameters of word clouds are due to a more even repartition of frequencies in the marine dataset (Table 1). Numbers, punctuations, common English stop words, conjunctions and of course “meiofauna” or “meiobenthos” were removed from the text data. Stemming was used to count stem words only, explaining the lack of suffixes