2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.tree.2008.07.014
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Ecological thresholds and regime shifts: approaches to identification

Abstract: There is an apparent gap between the prominence of present theoretical frameworks involving ecological thresholds and regime shifts, and the paucity of efforts to conduct simple tests and quantitative inferences on the actual appearance of such phenomena in ecological data. There is a wide range of statistical methods and analytical techniques now available that render these questions tractable, some of them even dating half a century back. Yet, their application has been sparse and confined within a narrow su… Show more

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Cited by 655 publications
(560 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
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“…The largely non-experimental nature of regime shift requires creative methods to increase understanding of mechanisms that both initiate and maintain regimes [2,4,[6][7][8][9][10][11]32,43,57], as the range of spatial scales in which key regime shift drivers operate and may be detected vary by more than five orders of magnitude (figure 1), while within-system spatial heterogeneity has long been identified as a potentially important factor in analyses of regime shifts [1,10]. As the above examples have demonstrated, recent examinations of the roles of spatial heterogeneity and the movement of marine populations have implications for the initiation and detection of regime shifts, and some common features emerge.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The largely non-experimental nature of regime shift requires creative methods to increase understanding of mechanisms that both initiate and maintain regimes [2,4,[6][7][8][9][10][11]32,43,57], as the range of spatial scales in which key regime shift drivers operate and may be detected vary by more than five orders of magnitude (figure 1), while within-system spatial heterogeneity has long been identified as a potentially important factor in analyses of regime shifts [1,10]. As the above examples have demonstrated, recent examinations of the roles of spatial heterogeneity and the movement of marine populations have implications for the initiation and detection of regime shifts, and some common features emerge.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, a wide array of statistical techniques has been applied to identify thresholds and step changes in ecological time series (Rodionov 2005;Weijerman et al 2005;Andersen et al 2008;Zaldivar et al 2008). Empirical testing, with real and thus short and noisy ecological time series, is needed to ground-truth forecasts of increased risk of a regime shift.…”
Section: Indicators Of Regime Shifts and Changes To Resilience In Ecomentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, fossil pollen and ancient DNA indicate that prior to human settlement the forests of Tawhiti Rahi were dominated by palms (Rhopalostylis sapida) and members of the Podocarpaceae; this assemblage is not seen on northern NZ offshore islands today. Human impacts, coupled with dispersal limitations of R. sapida and Podocarpaceae species, exceeded a threshold (Anderson et al 2009) of community change. As this example shows, without long-term data it is difficult to set targets and time-frames for restoration or to develop qualitative models to support such activities.…”
Section: The Challenges Of Scale In Forest Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%