Image from Google Jackets

Climate change and the past, present, and future of biotic interactions

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Science 2013Description: 499-504Subject(s): Summary: Biotic interactions drive key ecological and evolutionary processes and mediate ecosystem responses to climate change. The direction,frequency,and intensity of biotic interactions can in turn be altered by climate change. Understanding the complex interplay between climate and biotic interactions is thus essential for fully anticipating how ecosystems will respond to the fast rates of current warming, which are unprecedented since of the last glacial period. We highlight episodes of climate change that have disrupted ecosystems and trophic interactions over time scales ranging from years to millennia by changing species relative abundances and geographic ranges, causing extinctions, and creating transient and novel communities dominated by generalist species and interactions. these patterns emerge repeatedly across disparate temporal and spatial scales, suggesting the possibility of similar underlying processes. Based on these findings, we identify knowlwdge gaps and fruitful areas for research that will further our understanding of the effects of climate change on ecosystems.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Holdings
Item type Current library Vol info Status
Journals Journals RRII Library Volume 341, Issue 6145 Journals
Total holds: 0

Biotic interactions drive key ecological and evolutionary processes and mediate ecosystem responses to climate change. The direction,frequency,and intensity of biotic interactions can in turn be altered by climate change. Understanding the complex interplay between climate and biotic interactions is thus essential for fully anticipating how ecosystems will respond to the fast rates of current warming, which are unprecedented since of the last glacial period. We highlight episodes of climate change that have disrupted ecosystems and trophic interactions over time scales ranging from years to millennia by changing species relative abundances and geographic ranges, causing extinctions, and creating transient and novel communities dominated by generalist species and interactions. these patterns emerge repeatedly across disparate temporal and spatial scales, suggesting the possibility of similar underlying processes. Based on these findings, we identify knowlwdge gaps and fruitful areas for research that will further our understanding of the effects of climate change on ecosystems.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.
Share