|
Project description
Manipulation experiments – current
research
Considerable progress has been made to better
understand the response of terrestrial ecosystems to the
global change factors using both field manipulation
experiments, observations along gradients and modelling.
Many EU projects have worked on different angles of
ecosystem responses often concentrating on changes in
atmospheric CO2 concentrations, increased temperatures,
changes in precipitation and manipulations in N input. For
each specific driver, experimental technologies are well
developed, and research often focuses on responses in
ecosystem processes at various trophic levels such as
species response (photosynthesis, water use, growth,
microbial activity, soil fauna), community response (plant
and microbial species composition and competition,
reproductive success, plant phenology) and ecosystem
functioning (biomass accumulation, litter decomposition,
soil respiration and C exchange, CH4 and N2O exchange, N
mineralisation, water use, C and N interactions and
allocation, soil solution chemistry and leaching).
Thus, a significant number of experiments, knowledge and
data are generated on climate change within the European
research community, but much of this is fragmented and has
been generated in individual projects with little or no
coordination with other similar projects. One task of
ClimMani is to gather this fragmented knowledge in a common
database.
Topics and key
research questions in ClimMani
ClimMani will focus on the different climatic drivers and
their interactions as key topics in the work. Furthermore,
ClimMani will improve the foundation for overall ecosystem
modelling as a tool to better understand the complex
mechanisms of responses to changes in the ecological drivers
in atmospheric change. For each of these topic areas,
specific key research questions are asked. These questions
are detailed described in the ESF brochure on the ClimMani
project which you may download
here.
|