- Resurrection ecology
"Resurrection ecology" is an
evolutionary biology technique wherebyresearcher s hatch dormant eggs from lake sediments to studyanimal s as they existed decades ago. It is a new approach that might allowscientist s to observeevolution as it occurred, by comparing the animal forms hatched from older eggs with their extant descendants.One such researcher in the field is
W. Charles Kerfoot ofMichigan Technological University whose results were published in thejournal "Limnology and Oceanography". He reported on success in a search for "resting eggs" ofzooplankton that are dormant inPortage Lake onMichigan 'sUpper Peninsula . Thelake has undergone a considerable amount of change over the last 100 years includingflood ing bycopper mine debris,dredging , andeutrophication .Although the more esoteric demonstration of natural selection is alone a valuable aspect of the study described, there is a clear ecological implication in the discovery that very old zooplankton eggs have survived in the lake: the potential still exists, if and when this environment is restored to something of a more pristine nature, for at least some of the original (pre-disturbance) inhabitants to re-establish populations once presumed lost. The genes valuable to survival of those species in a restored environment are still "readily" available and may be quickly assimilated by the modern populations, perhaps requiring no more than a fortuitous disturbance of the bottom.
ee also
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Limnology
*Paleoecology External links
* [http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/DyeHard/story?id=666435&page=1 ABC News article about Resurrection Ecology]
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