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Freshwater salinisation : a research agenda for a saltier world

Authors :
Cunillera-Montcusi, David
Beklioglu, Meryem
Canedo-Arguelles, Miguel
Jeppesen, Erik
Ptacnik, Robert
Amorim, Cihelio A.
Arnott, Shelley E.
Berger, Stella A.
Brucet, Sandra
Dugan, Hilary A.
Gerhard, Miriam
Horvath, Zsofia
Langenheder, Silke
Nejstgaard, Jens C.
Reinikainen, Marko
Striebel, Maren
Urrutia-Cordero, Pablo
Vad, Csaba F.
Zadereev, Egor
Matias, Miguel
Cunillera-Montcusi, David
Beklioglu, Meryem
Canedo-Arguelles, Miguel
Jeppesen, Erik
Ptacnik, Robert
Amorim, Cihelio A.
Arnott, Shelley E.
Berger, Stella A.
Brucet, Sandra
Dugan, Hilary A.
Gerhard, Miriam
Horvath, Zsofia
Langenheder, Silke
Nejstgaard, Jens C.
Reinikainen, Marko
Striebel, Maren
Urrutia-Cordero, Pablo
Vad, Csaba F.
Zadereev, Egor
Matias, Miguel
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The widespread salinisation of freshwater ecosystems poses a major threat to the biodiversity, functioning, and services that they provide. Human activities promote freshwater salinisation through multiple drivers (e.g., agriculture, resource extraction, urbanisation) that are amplified by climate change. Due to its complexity, we are still far from fully understanding the ecological and evolutionary consequences of freshwater salinisation. Here, we assess current research gaps and present a research agenda to guide future studies. We identified different gaps in taxonomic groups, levels of biological organisation, and geographic regions. We suggest focusing on global- and landscape-scale processes, functional approaches, genetic and molecular levels, and ecoevolutionary dynamics as key future avenues to predict the consequences of freshwater salinisation for ecosystems and human societies.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
application/pdf, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1349079382
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016.j.tree.2021.12.005