This review provides a Canadian perspective on freshwater zooplankton diversity and ecology across scales and systems. It aims at describing how zooplankton are diverse in forms and functions, and constitute a key component of plankton food webs, a model for ecological theories and a sentinel for monitoring ecological integrity and function in lakes facing environmental changes and anthropogenic stressors. These objectives are addressed across a continuum of scales (continental, regional and local) and systems (reservoirs, lakes and ponds). This perspective shows that the environmental control of zooplankton biodiversity, community structure and function in Canada is complex and variable. Zooplankton communities demonstrated a wide range of responses to anthropogenic disturbances across scales and systems due to interactions with watershed biogeochemistry and climate. This review supports the Multiple Forces hypothesis where forcing by abiotic factors (climate, nutrients, morphometry and chemistry) has a fundamental role at continental scale over Canadian ecoregions, and at regional scale in the Boreal ecozones. In contrast, forcing by biotic factors (algal resources and predators) is relatively more influential at local scale, in resort and urban regions. The challenge for future research will be to combine all new concepts and approaches in a global perspective to better understand the responses of freshwater zooplankton to multiple environmental changes and anthropogenic stressors in Canada.