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This is how species extinction affects complex ecosystems - Read

This is because current thinking assumes that when a species vanishes, its role within an environment is lost too.

This is how species extinction affects complex ecosystems - Read

New Delhi: A new study based in the United Kingdom has found that methods used to predict the effect of species extinction on ecosystems could be producing inaccurate results.

This is because current thinking assumes that when a species vanishes, its role within an environment is lost too.

However, scientists working on a new study have found that when a species (for example a group of sea creatures) is wiped out by a catastrophic event, other species can change their behaviour to compensate, exploiting the vacant role left behind.

This leads to positive or negative effects on ecosystems, and in turn, either better or worse outcomes than current estimates would suggest.

At present, predictions assume that any contribution is completely lost at the point of extinction -leading to a decline in ecosystem performance.

The findings are published in the journal Scientific Reports.Lead author Matthias Schmidt Thomsen, of Ocean and Earth Science at the University of Southampton, said, "We have known for some time that a reduction in biodiversity has negative ecological consequences, but predictions of what happens to an ecosystem have not accounted for the occurrence of compensatory responses.

"He added, "Our study provides evidence that the response of surviving species to novel circumstances can, at least partially, offset, or indeed exacerbate, changes in an ecosystem that are associated with species removal.

"The researchers based their findings on the interaction of species in a community of invertebrates (such as clams, shrimps and worms) obtained from marine seabed samples collected in Galway Bay, Ireland.

Bottom dwelling marine organisms are particularly vulnerable to extinction because they are often unable to avoid disturbance.

These organisms are important because they churn up sediments from the bottom of the ocean, a process known as `bioturbation`, playing a vital role in returning nutrients to surrounding water as food for other creatures.

(With ANI inputs)