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16.2: Marine Biogeography

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    31714
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    The study of the relationship between the distribution of organisms and their environment belongs to a field of science known as biogeography. Marine biogeography—concerned with the distribution of marine organisms in the water column and on and below the seafloor—represents one branch of this field. Biogeography serves as a complementary field to ecology, the study of interactions between a co-occurring community of organisms and their environment. If there’s any distinction between the two, it’s that biogeographers tend to examine broader spatial and temporal scales (regional to global over geologic timescales) and make greater use of tools that generate large data sets. Ecologists focus on smaller spatial and temporal scales (local to regional, days to decades) and rely more on experimental methods (Jenkins and Ricklefs 2011). But in recent decades the distinctions between these two fields have blurred. Biogeography and ecology share a common interest in understanding the geological, chemical, physical, and biological factors that govern the distribution, ecology, and evolution of organisms (e.g., Jenkins and Ricklefs 2011; Heads 2015; Bianchi 2021).


    This page titled 16.2: Marine Biogeography is shared under a CC BY 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by W. Sean Chamberlin, Nicki Shaw, and Martha Rich (Blue Planet Publishing) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.