A new generation of climate-change experiments: events, not trends
Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research · University of Bayreuth
Abstract
Intensification of weather extremes is currently emerging as one of the most important facets of climate change. Research on extreme events (“event-focused” in contrast to “trend-focused”) has increased in recent years and, in 2004, accounted for one-fifth of the experimental climate-change studies published. Numerous examples, ranging from microbiology and soil science to biogeography, demonstrate how extreme weather events can accelerate shifts in species composition and distribution, thereby facilitating changes in ecosystem functioning. However, assessing the importance of extreme events for ecological processes poses a major challenge because of the very nature of such events: their effects are out of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 40.01
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 47
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Climate change
- Extreme weather
- Ecology
- Environmental science
- Environmental resource management
- Climatology
- Biology
- Geology