Abstract

Multiple stressors are increasingly affecting organisms and communities, thereby modifying ecosystems state and functioning. Raising awareness about the threat from multiple stressors has increased the number of experimental and observational studies specifically addressing consequences of stressor interactions on biota. Most studies measure the direct effects of multiple stressors and their interactions on biological endpoints such as abundance, biomass, or diversity of target organism groups. This yields invaluable information for the management and restoration of stressed ecosystems. However, as we argue in our perspective paper, this common approach ignores a fundamental characteristic of communities and ecosystems, i.e. that organisms in ecosystems are interlinked by biotic interactions in ecological networks. Examples from the literature show that biotic interactions can modify stressor effects, transfer stressor effects to distant groups of organisms, and create new stressor interactions. These examples also suggest that changes in biotic interactions can have effects of similar or greater magnitude than direct stressor effects. We provide a perspective on how to include network characteristics and biotic interactions into analyses of multiple-stressor effects on ecosystems. A strength of our approach is that it can make use of biomonitoring data produced with established and intercalibrated methods, and can combine it with novel metrics used to describe the functioning of ecosystems, such as trait information or stable-isotope measurements. The insights on network-mediated effects gained via the approach we propose can substantially increase mechanistic understanding of multiple-stressor effects, and in turn, the efficiency of ecosystem management and restoration.

Highlights

  • Anthropogenic stressors affecting organisms and ecosystems rarely occur in isolation

  • We believe that embracing ecological network theory, and using statistical approaches that allow testing and quantifying effects mediated by biotic interactions and network characteristics would greatly benefit research and management of communities and ecosystems exposed to multiple stressors

  • We illustrate how biotic interactions might be included in multiple-stressors studies on two scales of complexity, (i) on simplifications of the network aiming at resolving causal pathways and measuring processes in detail, and (ii) on assessments of complex food webs aimed at analyzing energy pathways and network characteristics

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Summary

Introduction

Anthropogenic stressors affecting organisms and ecosystems rarely occur in isolation. One of the greatest challenges to assess, understand, and predict the impact of multiple stressors on communities and ecosystems arises from stressor effects mediated and modified by biotic interactions (Rosenblatt et al, 2017; Seibold et al, 2018).

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