Abstract

This commentary summarizes the publication history of Global Change Biology for works on experimental manipulations over the past 25 years and highlights a number of key publications. The retrospective summary is then followed by some thoughts on the future of experimental work as it relates to mechanistic understanding and methodological needs. Experiments for elevated CO2 atmospheres and anticipated warming scenarios which take us beyond historical analogs are suggested as future priorities. Disturbance is also highlighted as a key agent of global change. Because experiments are demanding of both personnel effort and limited fiscal resources, the allocation of experimental investments across Earth's biomes should be done in ecosystems of key importance. Uncertainty analysis and broad community consultation should be used to identify research questions and target biomes that will yield substantial gains in predictive confidence and societal relevance. A full range of methodological approaches covering small to large spatial scales will continue to be justified as a source of mechanistic understanding. Nevertheless, experiments operating at larger spatial scales encompassing organismal, edaphic, and environmental diversity of target ecosystems are favored, as they allow for the assessment of long‐term biogeochemical feedbacks enabling a full range of questions to be addressed. Such studies must also include adequate investment in measurements of key interacting variables (e.g., water and nutrient availability and budgets) to enable mechanistic understanding of responses and to interpret context dependency. Integration of ecosystem‐scale manipulations with focused process‐based manipulations, networks, and large‐scale observations will aid more complete understanding of ecosystem responses, context dependence, and the extrapolation of results. From the outset, these studies must be informed by and integrated with ecosystem models that provide quantitative predictions from their embedded mechanistic hypotheses. A true two‐way interaction between experiments and models will simultaneously increase the rate and robustness of Global Change research.

Highlights

  • This commentary summarizes the publication history of Global Change Biology for works on experimental manipulations over the past 25 years and highlights a number of key publications

  • As a part of this 25th anniversary edition of Global Change Biology (GCB), a search of the Web of Science “All-Databases” collection for GCB publications over its 25 years in business yielded 19.5% that were interpreted to be studies of direct experimental manipulations, field observations across temporal or spatial environmental gradients, or model simulations to address how model-based hypotheses predict ecosystem responses to climate change experiments

  • Publications on experimental or measurement methodologies are not common in GCB, but they often develop into influential publications setting the stage for range of influential studies

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Summary

INVITED COMMENTARY

Advancing global change biology through experimental manipulations: Where have we been and where might we go?. Environmental Sciences Division and Climate Change Science Institute, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, TN, USA. Funding information United States Department of Energy, Grant/Award Number: DE-AC05-1008 00OR22725; Office of Science; Office of Biological and Environmental Research

HANSON and WALKER
| Experiments to reveal specific processes
Findings
Projected precipitaƟon change
Full Text
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