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From metrics to Monet: the need for an ecologically meaningful guiding image

From metrics to Monet: the need for an ecologically meaningful guiding image In the early 1900s the French Impressionist Claude Monet (1840–1926) painted a series of large canvases on the theme of water lilies ( Nymphéas ) and lily ponds. His famous paintings provide one possible ‘guiding image’ for lowland ponds and shallow lakes. They capture the disposition, size, structure and orientation of plant beds in a way that no routine biological recording ever could. We don't even need to understand the multiple functions performed by aquatic vegetation in buffering trophic interactions in lakes, stabilizing sediment, oxygenating the rhizosphere or storing nutrients. These are implicit in the stillness and clarity of the water, and surely, no self‐respecting large zooplankter could resist taking refuge among the darkened caves beneath those floating leaves. Monet's lilies succeed as a guiding image for shallow lake vegetation because they are tangible and universally and instantly accessible. There are of course many other examples that could be used; Ophelia by Millais (1851) offers a vision for lowland streams complete with shrub‐covered eroding bank, overhanging willow, beds of water crowfoot, patches of bur‐reed, and small amphibious herbs, all painted in characteristic Pre‐Raphaelite detail. However, simple diagrams, photographs or a well‐scripted, jargon‐free narrative might serve us equally well. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater Ecosystems Wiley

From metrics to Monet: the need for an ecologically meaningful guiding image

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References (4)

Publisher
Wiley
Copyright
Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
ISSN
1052-7613
eISSN
1099-0755
DOI
10.1002/aqc.1233
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

In the early 1900s the French Impressionist Claude Monet (1840–1926) painted a series of large canvases on the theme of water lilies ( Nymphéas ) and lily ponds. His famous paintings provide one possible ‘guiding image’ for lowland ponds and shallow lakes. They capture the disposition, size, structure and orientation of plant beds in a way that no routine biological recording ever could. We don't even need to understand the multiple functions performed by aquatic vegetation in buffering trophic interactions in lakes, stabilizing sediment, oxygenating the rhizosphere or storing nutrients. These are implicit in the stillness and clarity of the water, and surely, no self‐respecting large zooplankter could resist taking refuge among the darkened caves beneath those floating leaves. Monet's lilies succeed as a guiding image for shallow lake vegetation because they are tangible and universally and instantly accessible. There are of course many other examples that could be used; Ophelia by Millais (1851) offers a vision for lowland streams complete with shrub‐covered eroding bank, overhanging willow, beds of water crowfoot, patches of bur‐reed, and small amphibious herbs, all painted in characteristic Pre‐Raphaelite detail. However, simple diagrams, photographs or a well‐scripted, jargon‐free narrative might serve us equally well.

Journal

Aquatic Conservation: Marine and Freshwater EcosystemsWiley

Published: Nov 1, 2011

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