2018
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0200382
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Assessing sustainability in North America’s ecosystems using criticality and information theory

Abstract: Sustainability is a key concept in economic and policy debates. Nevertheless, it is usually treated only in a qualitative way and has eluded quantitative analysis. Here, we propose a sustainability index based on the premise that sustainable systems do not lose or gain Fisher Information over time. We test this approach using time series data from the AmeriFlux network that measures ecosystem respiration, water and energy fluxes in order to elucidate two key sustainability features: ecosystem health and stabil… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(41 citation statements)
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References 82 publications
(73 reference statements)
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“…Recent results show convincing evidence that criticality may be a key feature of a healthy state [43][44][45][46]65 . Our results show that due to the presence of parasites, there is a depart from criticality via a diminish of emergence (adaptability) and then a loss of health.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Recent results show convincing evidence that criticality may be a key feature of a healthy state [43][44][45][46]65 . Our results show that due to the presence of parasites, there is a depart from criticality via a diminish of emergence (adaptability) and then a loss of health.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Recent results show convincing evidence that human health requires that systemic physiological signals, such as heart rate, be at criticality [29][30][31][32]51 . Our results show that due to the presence of parasites, there is a depart from criticality via a diminish of emergence (adaptability) and then a loss of health.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Summarizing, in the dynamic response of ecosystems under the criticality framework (Ramírez-Carrillo et al, 2018), a healthy ecosystem is found where a balance between robustness and adaptation is reached. In the case of network topology, the ecosystems need to develop a good balance between strong and weak interactions in order to be stable.…”
Section: Vital Landscape Attributes (Vlas)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The universality of criticality is still under consideration and is known as the "criticality hypothesis" which states that systems in a dynamic system that shifts between order and disorder reach the greatest level of computing capacities when reaches a balance between robustness and flexibility (see Roli et al, 2018 and references therein). This idea of criticality was recently used in an information theory approach to defining ecosystem health and sustainability (Ramírez-Carrillo et al, 2018). In this article, Ramírez-Carrillo et al (2018) consider that an ecosystem is healthy if it is in criticality, as a mixture of scale invariance (as power laws in power spectra) and a balance between adaptability and robustness.…”
Section: Complexity Perspectivementioning
confidence: 99%
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