4.8 Review

Local stressors mask the effects of warming in freshwater ecosystems

Journal

ECOLOGY LETTERS
Volume 25, Issue 11, Pages 2540-2551

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.14108

Keywords

antagonisms; aquatic ecology; dominance null model; global change; multiple stressors; stressor interactions

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/M020843/1, NE/S000348/1, NE/V001396/1, V001396, S000348, M020843]

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The study found that the impacts of climate warming on freshwater ecosystems are usually determined by the stronger stressor, especially when this stressor is associated with human land use. Predicting the effects of multiple stressors depends on the identity of the stressors and the asymmetry of their effects.
Climate warming is a ubiquitous stressor in freshwater ecosystems, yet its interactive effects with other stressors are poorly understood. We address this knowledge gap by testing the ability of three contrasting null models to predict the joint impacts of warming and a range of other aquatic stressors using a new database of 296 experimental combinations. Despite concerns that stressors will interact to cause synergisms, we found that net impacts were usually best explained by the effect of the stronger stressor alone (the dominance null model), especially if this stressor was a local disturbance associated with human land use. Prediction accuracy depended on stressor identity and how asymmetric stressors were in the magnitude of their effects. These findings suggest we can effectively predict the impacts of multiple stressors by focusing on the stronger stressor, as habitat alteration, nutrients and contamination often override the biological consequences of higher temperatures in freshwater ecosystems.

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