Living in the Now: Physiological Mechanisms to Tolerate a Rapidly Changing Environment
University of California, Santa Barbara · San Francisco State University
Abstract
Rising atmospheric carbon dioxide has resulted in scientific projections of changes in global temperatures, climate in general, and surface seawater chemistry. Although the consequences to ecosystems and communities of metazoans are only beginning to be revealed, a key to forecasting expected changes in animal communities is an understanding of species' vulnerability to a changing environment. For example, environmental stressors may affect a particular species by driving that organism outside a tolerance window, by altering the costs of metabolic processes under the new conditions, or by changing patterns of development and reproduction. Implicit in all these examples is the foundational understanding of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.75
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 153
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Organism
- Ocean acidification
- Ecology
- Biology
- Climate change
- Ecosystem
- Vulnerability (computing)
- Environmental change
- Life below water