The ongoing need for rates: can physiology and omics come together to
co-design the measurements needed to understand complex ocean
biogeochemistry?
Abstract
The necessity to understand the influence of global ocean change on
biota has exposed wide-ranging gaps in our knowledge of the fundamental
principles that underpin marine life. Concurrently, physiological
research has stagnated, in part driven by the advent and rapid evolution
of molecular biological techniques, such that they now influence all
lines of enquiry in biological and microbial oceanography. This
dominance has led to an implicit assumption that physiology is outmoded,
and advocacy that ecological and biogeochemical models can be directly
informed by omics. However, the main modelling currencies continue to be
biological rates and biogeochemical fluxes. Here we ask: how do we
translate the wealth of information on physiological potential from
omics-based studies to quantifiable physiological rates and, ultimately,
to biogeochemical fluxes? Based on the trajectory of the
state-of-the-art in biomedical sciences, along with case-studies from
ocean sciences, we conclude that it is unlikely that omics can provide
such rates in the coming decade. Thus, while physiological rates will
continue to be central to providing projections of global change
biology, we must revisit the metrics we rely upon. We advocate for the
co-design of a new generation of rate measurements that better link the
benefits of omics and physiology.