Ludicrous Theoretical Diverspace of the Marine Biosphere: Could Oceans Hide a Mole of Species?
The largest possible diversity can be achieved by assuming (1) the smallest possible species body-size (3.3*10-23 m3); (2) population size of one individual per species; and (3) 0% apartment vacancy rate in oceans (i.e., ocean water is packed with taxonomically unique specimens representing bacteria-size species). These estimates yield an absurdly high upper bound for the marine biosphere of 2.9*1040 species, which exceeds by 32 orders of magnitude the highest guesstimates for global biodiversity today. This scenario is also grossly incompatible with the stratigraphic record in a number of obvious ways.
If more reasonable estimates are used for the minimum size of preservable (biomineralized) organisms (7.2*10-15 m3), minimum viable population size (106 individuals) and the fraction of ocean volume occupied (0.5%), the resulting Theoretical Diverspace (6.6*1023 species) approximates Avogadro's number and still exceeds the highest biodiversity estimates by 15 orders of magnitude. This discrepancy may mean that the neontological and paleontological diversity levels have been both severely underestimated or that the global biosphere is extremely undersaturated in terms of diversity. Alternatively, it is conceivable that our approach brutally overestimates the upper bound of Theoretical Diverspace and that more sophisticated parameterizations are required.