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Experimental strategies to assess the biological ramifications of multiple drivers of global ocean change - a review

Version 2 2024-09-18, 23:28
Version 1 2023-05-19, 16:31
journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-18, 23:28 authored by Philip BoydPhilip Boyd, S Collins, S Dupont, K Fabricius, J-P Gattuso, J Havenhand, DA Hutchins, U Riebesell, MS Rintoul, M Vichi, H Biswas, A Ciotti, K Gao, M Gehlen, Catriona HurdCatriona Hurd, H Kurihawa, CM McGraw, J Navarro, GE Nilsson, U Passow, H-O Portner
Marine life is controlled by multiple physical and chemical drivers and by diverse ecological processes. Many of these oceanic properties are being altered by climate change and other anthropogenic pressures. Hence identifying the influences of multi-faceted ocean change, from local to global scales, is a complex task. To guide policy-making and make projections of the future of the marine biosphere, it is essential to understand biological responses at physiological, evolutionary and ecological levels. Here, we contrast and compare different approaches to multiple driver experiments that aim to elucidate biological responses to a complex matrix of ocean global change. We present the benefits and the challenges of each approach with a focus on marine research, and guidelines to navigate through these different categories to help identify strategies that might best address research questions in fundamental physiology, experimental evolutionary biology, and community ecology. Our Review reveals that the field of multiple driver research is being pulled in complementary directions: the need for reductionist approaches to obtain process-oriented, mechanistic understanding, and a requirement to quantify responses to projected future scenarios of ocean change. We conclude the Review with recommendations on how best to align different experimental approaches to contribute fundamental information needed for science-based policy-formulation.

History

Publication title

Global Change Biology

Volume

24

Issue

6

Pagination

2239-2261

ISSN

1354-1013

Department/School

Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, Ecology and Biodiversity, Oceans and Cryosphere

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

9600 Garsington Rd, Oxford, England, Oxon, Ox4 2Dg

Rights statement

Copyright 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Socio-economic Objectives

190102 Ecosystem adaptation to climate change

UN Sustainable Development Goals

14 Life Below Water