Dynamics of a producer-freeloader ecosystem on the brink of collapse

Ecosystems can undergo sudden shifts to undesirable states, but recent studies with simple single-species ecosystems have demonstrated that advance warning can be provided by the slowing down of population dynamics near a tipping point. However, it is unclear how this ‘critical slowing down’ will ma...

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Podrobná bibliografie
Hlavní autoři: Sanchez, Alvaro, Dai, Lei, Gore, Jeff, Chen, Andrew I.
Další autoři: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics
Médium: Článek
Jazyk:en_US
Vydáno: Nature Publishing Group 2015
On-line přístup:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/98065
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8018-9701
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4583-8555
Popis
Shrnutí:Ecosystems can undergo sudden shifts to undesirable states, but recent studies with simple single-species ecosystems have demonstrated that advance warning can be provided by the slowing down of population dynamics near a tipping point. However, it is unclear how this ‘critical slowing down’ will manifest in ecosystems with strong interactions between their components. Here we probe the dynamics of an experimental producer-freeloader ecosystem as it approaches a catastrophic collapse. Surprisingly, the producer population grows in size as the environment deteriorates, highlighting that population size can be a misleading measure of ecosystem stability. By analysing the oscillatory producer-freeloader dynamics for over 100 generations in multiple environmental conditions, we find that the collective ecosystem dynamics slow down as the tipping point is approached. Analysis of the coupled dynamics of interacting populations may therefore be necessary to provide advance warning of collapse in complex communities.