4.5 Article

Cascading effects: insights from the US Long Term Ecological Research Network

Journal

ECOSPHERE
Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ecs2.3430

Keywords

agriculture; Antarctica; boreal forest; fire; forests; lady bugs; lakes; land use; penguins; Special Feature: Forecasting Earth's Ecosystems with Long-Term Ecological Research; zebra mussels

Categories

Funding

  1. NSF Long-Term Ecological Research program
  2. NSF Long-Term Ecological Research Program at the Kellogg Biological Station [DEB 1637653, 182042]
  3. Michigan State University AgBioResearch
  4. Environmental Protection Agency (Ecology and Oceanography of Harmful Algal Blooms/2004-Science to Achieve Results-C1) [RD83170801]
  5. National Science Foundation (Division of Environmental Biology) [0841864, 0841944, 1027253]
  6. Gull Lake Quality Organization
  7. Michigan State University (Kellogg Biological Station and recruitment fellowship)
  8. NSF LTER Award [PLR-1440435, DEB-1237491]
  9. NASA ROSES award [NNX14AL86G]
  10. Division Of Environmental Biology
  11. Direct For Biological Sciences [0841944] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The research emphasizes the importance of long-term studies in understanding the complexities of ecological cascades. Through the integration of multiple thematic stories, the study highlights the need for long-term research to reveal the complexity of different types of ecological cascades.
Ecosystems across the United States are changing in complex and unpredictable ways and analysis of these changes requires coordinated, long-term research. This paper is a product of a synthesis effort of the U.S. National Science Foundation funded Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) network addressing the LTER core research area of populations and communities. This analysis revealed that each LTER site had at least one compelling story about what their site would look like in 50-100 yr. As the stories were prepared, themes emerged, and the stories were group into papers along five themes: state change, connectivity, resilience, time lags, and cascading effects. This paper addresses the cascading effects theme and includes stories from the Bonanza Creek (boreal), Kellogg Biological Station (agricultural and freshwater), Palmer (Antarctica), and Harvard Forest (temperate forest) LTER sites. We define cascading effects very broadly to include a wide array of unforeseen chains of events that result from a variety of actions or changes in a system. While climate change is having important direct effects on boreal forests, indirect effects mediated by fire activity-severity, size, and return interval-have large cascading effects over the long term. In northeastern temperate forests, legacies of human management and disturbance affect the composition of current forests, which creates a cascade of effects that interact with the climate-facilitated invasion of an exotic pest. In Antarctica, declining sea ice creates a cascade of effects including declines in Adelie and increases in Gentoo penguins, changes in phytoplankton, and consequent changes in zooplankton populations. An invasion of an exotic species of lady beetle is likely to have important future effects on pest control and conservation of native species in agricultural landscapes. New studies of zebra mussels, a well-studied invader, have established links between climate, the heat tolerance of the mussels, and harmful algal blooms. Collectively, these stories highlight the need for long-term studies to sort out the complexities of different types of ecological cascades. The diversity of sites within the LTER network facilitates the emergence of overarching concepts about trophic interactions as an important driver of ecosystem structure, function, services, and futures.

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