2013
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0059813
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Trends in Ecological Research during the Last Three Decades – A Systematic Review

Abstract: It is thought that the science of ecology has experienced conceptual shifts in recent decades, chiefly from viewing nature as static and balanced to a conception of constantly changing, unpredictable, complex ecosystems. Here, we ask if these changes are reflected in actual ecological research over the last 30 years. We surveyed 750 articles from the entire pool of ecological literature and 750 articles from eight leading journals. Each article was characterized according to its type, ecological domain, and ap… Show more

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Cited by 72 publications
(87 citation statements)
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“…Three such studies are Swihart (Swihart et al 2002), Nobis (Nobis and Wohlgemuth 2004), and Carmel (Carmel et al 2013), the last two dealt with much shorter time frames. Swihart examined progress in ecology by subjectively scoring articles in "Ecology" from 1920 to 2000 on how they ranged between pure pattern recognition-answering "what" questions-and pure process-based studies-answering "how" or "why" questions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Three such studies are Swihart (Swihart et al 2002), Nobis (Nobis and Wohlgemuth 2004), and Carmel (Carmel et al 2013), the last two dealt with much shorter time frames. Swihart examined progress in ecology by subjectively scoring articles in "Ecology" from 1920 to 2000 on how they ranged between pure pattern recognition-answering "what" questions-and pure process-based studies-answering "how" or "why" questions.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, both response type and magnitude are highly context dependent, indicating that unanticipated emergent effects of climate change on ecosystems are likely to occur [34]. As suggested elsewhere [18], eco-evolutionary dynamics and the roles of direct and indirect multi-species interactions can be studied from an evolving meta-community perspective to obtain deeper insights into the complex issue of how abiotic factors and species interactions together and in an interdependent manner shape biodiversity responses to climate change [10,14,18,26,29].…”
Section: Use Multi-species Approachesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…The effects seen in manipulation studies conducted under semi-natural or laboratory conditions may therefore differ and sometimes be weaker, compared with experiments conducted in the wild [27,28]. Despite this, most ecological studies generally use single-species approaches [29]. A similar pattern is evident among the studies of biodiversity effects of temperature change; the majority (60%) of investigations studied single species; 18% studied two different species; and in 22% of the investigations, three or more focal species were studied.…”
Section: Characteristics Of Experimental Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, only 17% of ecological studies in the past three decades have been at the community level (Carmel et al . 2013), suggesting that the characterization of changes in food webs at multiple trophic levels remains challenging.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%