Authors
David Cunillera-Montcusí, Meryem Beklioğlu, Miguel Cañedo-Argüelles, Erik Jeppesen, Robert Ptacnik, Cihelio A Amorim, Shelley E Arnott, Stella A Berger, Sandra Brucet, Hilary A Dugan, Miriam Gerhard, Zsófia Horváth, Silke Langenheder, Jens C Nejstgaard, Marko Reinikainen, Maren Striebel, Pablo Urrutia-Cordero, Csaba F Vad, Egor Zadereev, Miguel Matias
Publication date
2022/5/1
Source
Trends in Ecology & Evolution
Volume
37
Issue
5
Pages
440-453
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The widespread salinisation of freshwater ecosystems poses a major threat to the biodiversity, functioning, and services that they provide. Human activities promote freshwater salinisation through multiple drivers (e.g., agriculture, resource extraction, urbanisation) that are amplified by climate change. Due to its complexity, we are still far from fully understanding the ecological and evolutionary consequences of freshwater salinisation. Here, we assess current research gaps and present a research agenda to guide future studies. We identified different gaps in taxonomic groups, levels of biological organisation, and geographic regions. We suggest focusing on global- and landscape-scale processes, functional approaches, genetic and molecular levels, and eco-evolutionary dynamics as key future avenues to predict the consequences of freshwater salinisation for ecosystems and human societies.
Total citations
202220232024156642
Scholar articles
D Cunillera-Montcusí, M Beklioğlu… - Trends in Ecology & Evolution, 2022