Authors
Eoin J O'Gorman, Doris E Pichler, Georgina Adams, Jonathan P Benstead, Haley Cohen, Nicola Craig, Wyatt F Cross, Benoit OL Demars, Nikolai Friberg, Gisli Mar Gislason, Rakel Gudmundsdottir, Adrianna Hawczak, James M Hood, Lawrence N Hudson, Liselotte Johansson, Magnus P Johansson, James R Junker, Anssi Laurila, J Russell Manson, Efpraxia Mavromati, Daniel Nelson, Jon S Olafsson, Daniel M Perkins, Owen L Petchey, Marco Plebani, Daniel C Reuman, Bjoern C Rall, Rebecca Stewart, Murray SA Thompson, Guy Woodward
Publication date
2012/1/1
Book
Advances in ecological research
Volume
47
Pages
81-176
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Environmental warming is predicted to rise dramatically over the next century, yet few studies have investigated its effects in natural, multi-species systems. We present data collated over an 8-year period from a catchment of geothermally heated streams in Iceland, which acts as a natural experiment on the effects of warming across different organisational levels and spatiotemporal scales. Body sizes and population biomasses of individual species responded strongly to temperature, with some providing evidence to support temperature–size rules. Macroinvertebrate and meiofaunal community composition also changed dramatically across the thermal gradient. Interactions within the warm streams in particular were characterised by food chains linking algae to snails to the apex predator, brown trout. These chains were missing from the colder systems, where snails were replaced by much smaller herbivores and …
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