One feature of global change is that biota must respond not to single, but to multiple environmental drivers. By growing a model photosynthetic microbe in environments containing between one and eight different drivers, including changes in CO2, temperature, and pH, in different combinations, we show that the number as well as the identities of drivers explain shifts in population growth rates. This is because the biotic response to multiple environmental drivers depends on the response to the single dominant driver, and the chance of a driver of large effect being present increases with the number of drivers. Interactions between drivers slightly counteract the expected drop in growth. Our results demonstrate that population growth decline...
Global change encompasses many co-occurring anthropogenic drivers, which can act synergistically or ...
Phytoplankton growth is controlled by multiple environmental drivers, which are all modified by clim...
Abstract Plants are subject to trade-offs among growth strategies such that adaptations for optimal ...
One feature of global change is that biota must respond not to single, but to multiple environmental...
Under global change, populations have four possible responses: ‘migrate, acclimate, adapt or die’ (G...
Multiple, simultaneous environmental changes, in climatic/abiotic factors, in interacting species, a...
International audienceEnvironmental change can alter species’ abundances within communities consiste...
International audienceGlobal change encompasses many co-occurring anthropogenic drivers, which can a...
The responses of species to environmental changes will determine future community composition and ec...
Species interactions change when the external conditions change. How these changes affect microbial ...
Warming global temperatures are driving changes in species distributions, growth and timing, but muc...
Jensen’s inequality predicts that the response of any given system to average constant conditions is...
Climate change is altering aquatic environments in a complex way, and simultaneous shifts in many pr...
Microbial communities in many ecosystems are facing a broad range of global change drivers, such as ...
Global change encompasses many co-occurring anthropogenic drivers, which can act synergistically or ...
Phytoplankton growth is controlled by multiple environmental drivers, which are all modified by clim...
Abstract Plants are subject to trade-offs among growth strategies such that adaptations for optimal ...
One feature of global change is that biota must respond not to single, but to multiple environmental...
Under global change, populations have four possible responses: ‘migrate, acclimate, adapt or die’ (G...
Multiple, simultaneous environmental changes, in climatic/abiotic factors, in interacting species, a...
International audienceEnvironmental change can alter species’ abundances within communities consiste...
International audienceGlobal change encompasses many co-occurring anthropogenic drivers, which can a...
The responses of species to environmental changes will determine future community composition and ec...
Species interactions change when the external conditions change. How these changes affect microbial ...
Warming global temperatures are driving changes in species distributions, growth and timing, but muc...
Jensen’s inequality predicts that the response of any given system to average constant conditions is...
Climate change is altering aquatic environments in a complex way, and simultaneous shifts in many pr...
Microbial communities in many ecosystems are facing a broad range of global change drivers, such as ...
Global change encompasses many co-occurring anthropogenic drivers, which can act synergistically or ...
Phytoplankton growth is controlled by multiple environmental drivers, which are all modified by clim...
Abstract Plants are subject to trade-offs among growth strategies such that adaptations for optimal ...