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Means and extremes: building variability into community-level climate change experiments

期刊

ECOLOGY LETTERS
卷 16, 期 6, 页码 799-806

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ele.12095

关键词

climate change; down-scaled climate models; experimental treatments; experiments; freshwater; marine; terrestrial; weather scenarios

类别

资金

  1. Australian Government (Department of Climate Change and Energy Efficiency)
  2. National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility [NCCARF FW11-05]
  3. Australian Research Council [FT110100957, FT110100602]
  4. Australian Research Council [FT110100957, FT110100602] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Experimental studies assessing climatic effects on ecological communities have typically applied static warming treatments. Although these studies have been informative, they have usually failed to incorporate either current or predicted future, patterns of variability. Future climates are likely to include extreme events which have greater impacts on ecological systems than changes in means alone. Here, we review the studies which have used experiments to assess impacts of temperature on marine, freshwater and terrestrial communities, and classify them into a set of generations' based on how they incorporate variability. The majority of studies have failed to incorporate extreme events. In terrestrial ecosystems in particular, experimental treatments have reduced temperature variability, when most climate models predict increased variability. Marine studies have tended to not concentrate on changes in variability, likely in part because the thermal mass of oceans will moderate variation. In freshwaters, climate change experiments have a much shorter history than in the other ecosystems, and have tended to take a relatively simple approach. We propose a new generation' of climate change experiments using down-scaled climate models which incorporate predicted changes in climatic variability, and describe a process for generating data which can be applied as experimental climate change treatments.

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