4.5 Article

A framework for lotic macrosystem research

Journal

ECOSPHERE
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.3342

Keywords

ecosystem ecology; macroecology; macrosystem ecology; stream ecology concepts; teleconnections

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF macrosystem ecology grant [1442595]
  2. NSF grant [1926596]
  3. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01LN1320A]

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This article analyzes the nature of research in freshwater macrosystem biology, focusing on lotic studies, from both conceptual and current research perspectives. It describes the boundaries of permanent and transitional lotic macrosystems across spatial extents, contrasts ecosystem vs. macrosystem research, and provides examples of aquatic macrosystems ecology projects in the USA. The article also recommends incorporating large-scale lotic concepts developed over the last 40 years as the basis for lotic macrosystem studies and suggests future research directions in areas of climate change and teleconnections among distant organisms and systems.
We analyze here the nature of research in freshwater macrosystem biology (especially lotic studies) from both conceptual and current research perspectives. The boundaries of permanent and transitional lotic macrosystems from the smallest to largest spatial extents are described. We contrast ecosystem vs. macrosystem research and macroecology vs. macrosystems ecology and provide some examples of representative aquatic macrosystems ecology projects in the USA. We recommend approaches for incorporating certain large-scale lotic concepts developed over the last 40 yr as the bases for lotic macrosystem studies. Of these, the three most appropriate in chronological order are the River Continuum Concept, the Riverine Ecosystem Synthesis, and the Stream Biome Gradient Concept. Four other concepts would be suitable for testing macrosystem hypotheses after incorporating small to large conceptual or geographic expansions of the models. We suggest future research directions in lotic macrosystem research in areas of climate change and teleconnections among distant organisms and systems and include general recommendations for conducting macrosystem-level research.

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