Indirect Effects of Global Change: From Physiological and Behavioral Mechanisms to Ecological Consequences

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Abstract

Synopsis A major focus of current ecological research is to understand how global change makes species vulnerable to extirpation. To date, mechanistic ecophysiological analyses of global change vulnerability have focused primarily on the direct effects of changing abiotic conditions on whole-organism physiological traits, such as metabolic rate, locomotor performance, cardiac function, and critical thermal limits. However, species do not live in isolation within their physical environments, and direct effects of climate change are likely to be compounded by indirect effects that result from altered interactions with other species, such as competitors and predators. The Society for Integrative and Comparative Biology 2017 Symposium "Indirect Effects of Global Change: From Physiological and Behavioral Mechanisms to Ecological Consequences" was designed to synthesize multiple approaches to investigating the indirect effects of global change by bringing together researchers that study the indirect effects of global change from multiple perspectives across habitat, type of anthropogenic change, and level of biological organization. Our goal in bringing together researchers from different backgrounds was to foster cross-disciplinary insights into the mechanistic bases and higher-order ecological consequences of indirect effects of global change, and to promote collaboration among fields.

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Gunderson, A. R., Tsukimura, B., & Stillman, J. H. (2017). Indirect Effects of Global Change: From Physiological and Behavioral Mechanisms to Ecological Consequences. In Integrative and Comparative Biology (Vol. 57, pp. 48–54). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/icb/icx056

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