Authors
Rebecca IA Stewart, Matteo Dossena, David A Bohan, Erik Jeppesen, Rebecca L Kordas, Mark E Ledger, Mariana Meerhoff, Brian Moss, Christian Mulder, Jonathan B Shurin, Blake Suttle, Ross Thompson, Mark Trimmer, Guy Woodward
Publication date
2013/1/1
Source
Advances in ecological research
Volume
48
Pages
71-181
Publisher
Academic Press
Description
Predicting the ecological causes and consequences of global climate change requires a variety of approaches, including the use of experiments, models, and surveys. Among experiments, mesocosms have become increasingly popular because they provide an important bridge between smaller, more tightly controlled, microcosm experiments (which can suffer from limited realism) and the greater biological complexity of natural systems (in which mechanistic relationships often cannot be identified). A new evaluation of the contribution of the mesocosm approach, its potential for future research, as well as its limitations, is timely. As part of this review, we constructed a new database of over 250 post-1990 studies that have explored different components of climate change across a range of organisational levels, scales, and habitats. Issues related to realism, reproducibility and control are assessed in marine …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
RIA Stewart, M Dossena, DA Bohan, E Jeppesen… - Advances in ecological research, 2013