Dear Wayne,

In my point of viewn, ecosystem functions directly refer to how energy flows are shaped through ecosystem and how they allow ecosystem to maintain by themselves (without human intervention this time). So, when we measure a functional diversity we try to evaluate the number of different ways a given energy flow can be realized. One aim is to link living communities diversities to ecosystem functioning (energy flow) and so define how organisms participate to the success of energy transfer.

This is a quite fuzzy and very general definition but I hope this helps.

Regards,


Nicolas


Le Fri, 28 Sep 2012 02:43:00 +0200, Wayne Tyson <[email protected]> a écrit:

Thanks, Juan; I do appreciate the reference, but I am looking for a simper answer than that--a scientifically-based explanation of what ecosystem function means as an actual or theoretical feature of actual ecosystems. I am definitely not interested in ". . . an anthropocentric concept (as humans depend on ecosystems to survive) because is described as the capacity of the natural processes to provide an array of direct or indirect services or benefits to humans." I would be delighted to hear a discussion of benefits to humans some other time, however, but I do not want this discussion to wander off the central, very basic question now.

WT


  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Juan Alvez
  To: Wayne Tyson
  Cc: [email protected]
  Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2012 10:25 AM
  Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Visualizing functional diversity


  Hi Wayne,

You can best visualize ecosystem functions in a paper written 10 years ago by De Groot and others, (Ref: de Groot, R.S., Wilson, M.A., Boumans, R.M.J., 2002. A typology for the classification, description and valuation of ecosystem functions, goods and services. Ecological Economics 41, 393-408.). It describes four main ecosystem functions (regulation [climate, nutrient cycling, polination], habitat [refugia, nursery, etc.], information [scientific info, recreation, cultural and aesthetic] and production [food, genetic and medicinal resources, raw materials, etc.] functions). It is certainly an anthropocentric concept (as humans depend on ecosystems to survive) because is described as the capacity of the natural processes to provide an array of direct or indirect services or benefits to humans.

  Best,
  Juan


  On 9/26/2012 10:11 PM, Wayne Tyson wrote:

    Please describe function in ecosystems.

    WT

----- Original Message ----- From: "Katharine Miller" <[email protected]>
    To: <[email protected]>
    Sent: Wednesday, September 26, 2012 4:07 PM
    Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Visualizing functional diversity


    Hello,

I have used Rao's quadratic entropy to evaluate functional diversity between a number of estuaries for which I also have a GIS database. I would like to be able to visualize which sites are more functionally similar across the
    region to evaluate patterns in dispersal, etc.

I know it is possible to use the pairwise functional beta diversity values
    as a distance matrix in a Mantel test or multivariate regression on
    distances matrices (MRM) when comparing functional diversity to, for
example, environmental data. Would it also be appropriate to use these values in a PAM or other clustering method to identify estuaries that are
    more/less similar in functional diversity?

This is likely to sound like a very naive question, but I have done an extensive literature search and have not found where this has been done
    before  - perhaps because it is a bad idea for other reasons?

Any insights and/or references on this approach would be greatly appreciated.

    Thank you


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Nicolas PERU, PhD
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