Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2009
More than ten years ago, two of us (AGH and DGR) were lucky enough to edit a previous symposium of the British Ecological Society (BES) – Aquatic Ecology: Scale, Pattern and Process (Giller, Hildrew & Raffaelli, 1994). In the Introduction to that volume, we pointed out that the BES had not devoted a single previous symposium to aquatic ecosystems. Evidently we did not change the culture, since the Body Size symposium held at the University of Hertfordshire in September 2005 was only the second! Aquatic Ecology: Scale, Pattern and Process had two objectives: (i) to explore how the scale of approach affected the patterns that were detected and the processes that appeared to be important, and (ii) to compare freshwater and marine ecosystems. In Body Size: The Structure and Function of Aquatic Ecosystems, both those questions of scale and comparison among systems are very much still alive as continuing themes. Body size determines overwhelmingly the scale at which organisms perceive and navigate through their physical world, and the contrasts between freshwater and marine ecosystems remain evident. Body size is a species trait with implications beyond scale, however, and we believe that the present volume shows that more similarities than differences are evident among the diverse aquatic systems considered. Indeed, several authors argue here that fundamental ecological processes are revealed by comparing marine, freshwater and terrestrial systems.
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