Natural Length Scales of Ecological Systems: Applications at Community and Ecosystem Levels
Authored by Craig R Johnson
Date Published: 2009
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Abstract
The characteristic, or natural, length scales of a spatially dynamic
ecological landscape are the spatial scales at which the deterministic
trends in the dynamic are most sharply in focus. Given recent
development of techniques to determine the characteristic length scales
(CLSs) of real ecological systems, I explore the potential for using
CLSs to address three important and vexing issues in applied ecology, viz. (i) determining the optimum scales to monitor ecological systems, (ii) interpreting change in ecological communities, and (iii)
ascertaining connectivity between species in complex ecologies. In
summarizing the concept of characteristic length scales as system-level
scaling thresholds, I emphasize that the primary CLS is, by definition, the optimum scale at which to monitor a system if the objective is to
observe its deterministic dynamics at a system level. Using several
different spatially explicit individual-based models, I then explore
predictions of the underlying theory of CLSs in the context of
interpreting change and ascertaining connectivity among species in
ecological systems. Analysis of these models support predictions that
systems with strongly fluctuating community structure, but an otherwise
stable long-term dynamic defined by a stationary attractor, indicate an
invariant length scale irrespective of community structure at the time
of analysis, and irrespective of the species analyzed. In contrast, if
changes in the underlying dynamic are forcibly induced, the shift in
dynamics is reflected by a change in the primary length scale. Thus, consideration of the magnitude of the CLS through time enables
distinguishing between circumstances where there are temporal changes in
community structure but not in the long-term dynamic, from that where
changes in community structure reflect some kind of fundamental shift in
dynamics. In this context, CLSs emerge as a diagnostic tool to identify
phase shifts to alternative stable states associated with loss of
resilience in ecological systems and thus provide a means to interpret
change in community composition. By extension, comparison of the CLSs of
ostensibly similar communities at different points in space can reveal
whether they experience similar underlying dynamics. Analysis of these
models also reveals that species in the same community whose dynamics
are largely independent indicate different length scales. These examples
demonstrate the potential to apply CLSs in a decision-support role in
determining scales for monitoring, interpreting whether change in
community structure reflects a shift in underlying dynamics and
therefore may warrant management intervention, and determining
connectivities among species in complex ecological systems.
Tags
Dynamics
resilience
Phase-shifts
Trophic cascades
Marine food-web
Coral-reef
Environmental disturbances
Interaction
strength
Intermediate-scale
Local interactions