“…Second, greater variance can increase the frequency, magnitude, and/or duration of climate extremes that cause ecological tipping points, force transitions to new ecological states, slow the rate of recovery from disturbance, or alternatively, promote community or ecotone stability (Chesson, 2000; Doak & Morris, 2010; Lynch et al, 2014; Peters et al, 2006; Scheffer et al, 2015; Zinnert et al, 2021). Third, as climate variance increases, differences in climate between consecutive years become more dramatic, increasing the potential for antecedent effects, in which current biological responses depend on responses to past perturbations (Liu et al, 2019; Ogle et al, 2015; Wood et al, 2022). For instance, current primary production may be lessened if the prior year is drier than average (Reichmann et al, 2013).…”