| Literature DB >> 30157296 |
Lisandro Benedetti-Cecchi1, Fabio Bulleri1, Martina Dal Bello2, Elena Maggi1, Chiara Ravaglioli1, Luca Rindi1.
Abstract
Understanding how increasing human domination of the biosphere affects life on earth is a critical research challenge. This task is facilitated by the increasing availability of open-source data repositories, which allow ecologists to address scientific questions at unprecedented spatial and temporal scales. Large datasets are mostly observational, so they may have limited ability to uncover causal relations among variables. Experiments are better suited at attributing causation, but they are often limited in scope. We propose hybrid datasets, resulting from the integration of observational with experimental data, as an approach to leverage the scope and ability to attribute causality in ecological studies. We show how the analysis of hybrid datasets with emerging techniques in time series analysis (Convergent Cross-mapping) and macroecology (Joint Species Distribution Models) can generate novel insights into causal effects of abiotic and biotic processes that would be difficult to achieve otherwise. We illustrate these principles with two case studies in marine ecosystems and discuss the potential to generalize across environments, species and ecological processes. If used wisely, the analysis of hybrid datasets may become the standard approach for research goals that seek causal explanations for large-scale ecological phenomena.Entities:
Keywords: causality; convergent cross-mapping; distributed experiments; empirical dynamic modelling; hybrid dataset approach; macroecology; species distribution models; time series
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30157296 DOI: 10.1002/ecy.2504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ecology ISSN: 0012-9658 Impact factor: 5.499