2013
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-417199-2.00005-7
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Increased Stream Productivity with Warming Supports Higher Trophic Levels

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Cited by 35 publications
(53 citation statements)
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“…Direct impacts on the secondary production of invertebrates and fish depend on drought intensity, with greatest effects occurring where flow cessation occurs (Lake, 2011;Ledger et al, 2011;Matthews and Marsh-Matthews, 2003). Indirect impacts may also occur as a result of changes in primary production, with lower resource availability likely to suppress higher trophic levels (Hannesdóttir et al, 2013 The impacts of climate change remain poorly understood at the higher multispecies levels of organisation (communities, food webs, ecosystems), especially for responses to components other than the direct effects of warming per se, such as atmospheric and hydrological changes in the environment (Stewart et al, 2013;Woodward et al, 2010), and to extreme events in particular. The history of food-web research in the context of environmental change, and its progression from qualitative binary approaches to the use of more sophisticated quantitative methods, has been covered elsewhere in recent reviews (e.g.…”
Section: P0405mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Direct impacts on the secondary production of invertebrates and fish depend on drought intensity, with greatest effects occurring where flow cessation occurs (Lake, 2011;Ledger et al, 2011;Matthews and Marsh-Matthews, 2003). Indirect impacts may also occur as a result of changes in primary production, with lower resource availability likely to suppress higher trophic levels (Hannesdóttir et al, 2013 The impacts of climate change remain poorly understood at the higher multispecies levels of organisation (communities, food webs, ecosystems), especially for responses to components other than the direct effects of warming per se, such as atmospheric and hydrological changes in the environment (Stewart et al, 2013;Woodward et al, 2010), and to extreme events in particular. The history of food-web research in the context of environmental change, and its progression from qualitative binary approaches to the use of more sophisticated quantitative methods, has been covered elsewhere in recent reviews (e.g.…”
Section: P0405mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…>1 ha, with shelving depths of up to 10 m). However, controlled heating would be unfeasible in such an experimental design, except perhaps using constructed ponds in geothermal areas such as the Hengill river basin in Iceland (Hannesdóttir et al, 2013;O'Gorman et al, 2012). In the current absence of such idealised systems, mesocosm research will continue to develop in smaller arenas alongside complementary work from models Veraart et al, 2011), long-term monitoring (Christensen et al, 2006), space-for-time substitution (Meerhoff et al, 2007;Moss et al, 2004), and paleoecology (Battarbee et al, 2005) in lentic systems.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Hagen et al, 2012;Hannesdóttir et al, 2013;Jeppesen et al, 2012;Ledger et al, 2012Ledger et al, , 2013McLaughlin et al, 2013;Meerhoff et al, 2012;Mintenbeck et al, 2012;Möllmann and Diekmann, 2012;Moya-Larano et al, 2012;Mulder et al, 2012;O'Gorman et al, 2012a,b;Raffaelli and White, 2013;Stewart et al, 2013;Struebig et al, 2013). This volume of Advances in Ecological Research is the last of a three-part compendium on this theme, which, when taken together, covers both aquatic and terrestrial systems, as well as addressing different components of global change and the various different ways of studying them, from monitoring to manipulation and modelling (e.g.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A case in point is the contribution by Hannesdóttir et al (2013) to the current volume. This study adds important new data from a "sentinel system" (the geothermally heated Hengill region of Iceland) that formed the focus of a monograph by O'Gorman et al (2012b) in the preceding volume.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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