The application of mesocosms, defined in this report as artificial 3 3
experimental enclosures ranging in size from 1 m to 10m, to address
various problems in the marine sciences has been a relatively recent
development. The application of the technology was dictated by the
realization that many important ocean processes and interactions cannot
be fully understood from observations in the natural environment or in
smaller enclosures. Such studies involve, for example, determining the
interactions between, and energy transfer from, one trophic level to
another, the biogeochemical cycling of elements and compounds, etc.
These and similar interactions and rate processes cannot normally be
established in situations (nature) where the detection and
quantification of rate processes are confused by advection and/or the
inability to study the same populations over time. In the case of
microcosms, mixed populations of primary producers, consumers, and
carnivores cannot be maintained, in balance, for a sufficient length of
time to determine normal interactions between the various components of
these trophic levels. This report, prepared by SCOR Working Group 85,
critically examines past applications of mesocosms to ocean research,
though there is no attempt to comprehensively review all literature
relevant to the subject. Further, the report outlines some important
advances emanating from their use and provides recommendations for
future applications. It constitutes the first of two reports from the
Working Group (see Introduction).