Multiple stressors, such as warming and invasions, often occur together and have nonadditive effects. Most studies to date assume that stressors operate in perfect synchrony, but this will rarely be the case in reality. Stressor sequence and overlap will have implications for ecological memorythe ability of past stressors to influence future responses. Moreover, stressors are usually defined in an anthropocentric context: what we consider a short-term stressor, such as a flood, will span multiple generations of microbes. We argue that to predict responses to multiple stressors from individuals to the whole ecosystem, it is necessary to consider metabolic rates, which determine the timescales at which individuals operate and therefore, ultimately, the ecological memory at different levels of ecological organization. Temporal Dynamics of Single and Multiple Stressors in Natural Systems Predicting how anthropogenic stressors, such as pollution events, warming, and novel pathogens, affect natural ecosystems is a major challenge for contemporary ecology. The presence, frequency, and magnitude of multiple stressors varies over time and space, however, with implications for their independent and combined effects on responses from individual behavior to entire ecosystem processes [1]. Here, we argue that the timing and duration of both the initial impacts of and recovery from stressors are particularly critical, and at least as important as the spatial component that has been the primary focus of most research to date. In particular, the temporal dynamics of multiple stressor events has been largely overlooked, yet time is critically important because stressors rarely, if ever, act in perfect synchrony, and the order and overlap duration will shape their combined impacts. Furthermore, stressors do not need to overlap in time to have cumulative effects, since the 'legacy' of previous stressors can alter the response of the ecosystem (and its component populations) to future stress.