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June 5, 2025

Body-size database may hold the key to saving marine life

Dr. Craig McClain photographing a whale shark off the coast of Cancun, Mexico. Credit: Dr. Alistair Dove
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Dr. Craig McClain photographing a whale shark off the coast of Cancun, Mexico. Credit: Dr. Alistair Dove

A new database detailing the maximum body size of marine life will shed light on species at risk from climate change and habitat degradation, paving the way for targeted protection.

Unlike the terrestrial animal kingdom, there are gaps in of how size has affected marine animal ecosystems, their evolution and how they could respond to environmental threats.

Where information is known about the size of marine animal species, it has tended to focus on the larger marine animals.

Now, an international group of scientists, including a researcher from the University of Sheffield, has created a database holding information on 85,000 marine animal species.

Known as the Marine Organismal Body Size Database or MOBS, it covers a range of species from microscopic zooplankton to whales.

Dr. Tom Webb, from the School of Biosciences at Sheffield and one of the researchers involved in the project, said, "Put simply, biologists have tended to focus on bigger organisms. And as a result, a lot of our understanding of how marine food webs and ecosystems work is based on knowledge of these larger species.

"But we also know that small-bodied species are really important: they constitute the majority of biodiversity, and are likely to fulfill unique and important functions within their ecological communities.

"Body size is such a key trait—important in determining how species interact with each other, and how they will react to a changing environment. The more species for which we are able to put a size to a name, the more accurate and representative our predictions about the fate of marine biodiversity can be."

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The scientists have announced the release of the database today (June 5) in the journal Global Ecology and Biogeography. The , titled "MOBS 1.0: A Database of Interspecific Variation in Marine Organismal Body Sizes," outlines how the knowledge of the of most marine animals remains "conspicuously inadequate."

This severely limits the ability to predict and deal with how environmental changes, like climate change, overfishing, and habitat destruction, affect these ocean environments.

A broader understanding of size is important as scientists recognize that marine food webs are typically very highly-size structured, with bigger organisms eating smaller organisms. This matters—for example, fishing for big fish has implications for their smaller prey and vice versa.

Studies also show larger birds are more susceptible to extinction than smaller birds.

So far, about 40% of marine species have been included in the database. Over the next couple of years, the researchers hope to increase coverage to 75% of marine animal species.

Professor Craig R. McClain, from the University of Louisiana and lead creator of the database, added, "Body size isn't just a number—it's a key to how life works.

"For decades, we've had this enormous data gap in marine life. MOBS doesn't just close that gap—it opens the door to a deeper understanding of the ocean's biodiversity."

The is and can be accessed at .

The study is an example of the breadth of research covered in the University's School of Biosciences, which aims to train students to solve some of the world's biggest challenges, from cancer, antimicrobial resistance and healthy aging, to and saving the planet's biodiversity.

More information: Craig R. McClain et al, MOBS 1.0: A Database of Interspecific Variation in Marine Organismal Body Sizes, Global Ecology and Biogeography (2025).

Journal information: Global Ecology and Biogeography

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The Marine Organismal Body Size Database (MOBS) compiles maximum body size data for 85,000 marine species, addressing significant gaps in knowledge about marine biodiversity. This resource enables more accurate predictions of how marine ecosystems respond to threats such as climate change and habitat loss, as body size is a key factor in ecological interactions and vulnerability.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.