4.5 Article

State changes: insights from the US Long Term Ecological Research Network

期刊

ECOSPHERE
卷 12, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.3433

关键词

arid grassland; coastal grassland; coastal marsh; sea-level rise; shrub invasion; Special Feature: Forecasting Earth's Ecosystems with Long-Term Ecological Research; tallgrass prairie; tropical mountain cloud forest

类别

资金

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DEB 1831952]
  2. U.S. Forest Service (Department of Agriculture) Research Unit
  3. University of Puerto Rico
  4. Luquillo Critical Zone Observatory [EAR1331841]
  5. NSF [DEB-1440484, OCE-1237140]
  6. NSF EAGER [1748133]
  7. DOE Office of Science [DE-SC0008088]
  8. National Science Foundation [DEB-0621014, DEB-1237733]
  9. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-SC0008088] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)
  10. Direct For Biological Sciences
  11. Division Of Environmental Biology [1748133] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Understanding complex and unpredictable ways ecosystems are changing and predicting future ecosystem states require coordinated, long-term research efforts. This paper reports on a US National Science Foundation funded Long Term Ecological Research network synthesis on anticipated changes in populations and communities. Common themes of state change, connectivity, resilience, time lags, and cascading effects are identified as key predictions across different ecosystems within the LTER network.
Understanding the complex and unpredictable ways ecosystems are changing and predicting the state of ecosystems and the services they will provide in the future requires coordinated, long-term research. This paper is a product of a U.S. National Science Foundation funded Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) network synthesis effort that addressed anticipated changes in future populations and communities. Each LTER site described what their site would look like in 50 or 100 yr based on long-term patterns and responses to global change drivers in each ecosystem. Common themes emerged and predictions were grouped into state change, connectivity, resilience, time lags, and cascading effects. Here, we report on the state change theme, which includes examples from the Georgia Coastal (coastal marsh), Konza Prairie (mesic grassland), Luquillo (tropical forest), Sevilleta (arid grassland), and Virginia Coastal (coastal grassland) sites. Ecological thresholds (the point at which small changes in an environmental driver can produce an abrupt and persistent state change in an ecosystem quality, property, or phenomenon) were most commonly predicted. For example, in coastal ecosystems, sea-level rise and climate change could convert salt marsh to mangroves and coastal barrier dunes to shrub thicket. Reduced fire frequency has converted grassland to shrubland in mesic prairie, whereas overgrazing combined with drought drive shrub encroachment in arid grasslands. Lastly, tropical cloud forests are susceptible to climate-induced changes in cloud base altitude leading to shifts in species distributions. Overall, these examples reveal that state change is a likely outcome of global environmental change across a diverse range of ecosystems and highlight the need for long-term studies to sort out the causes and consequences of state change. The diversity of sites within the LTER network facilitates the emergence of overarching concepts about state changes as an important driver of ecosystem structure, function, services, and futures.

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