When an ecological regime shift is really just stochastic noise
When an ecological regime shift is really just stochastic noise
Date
2013-02
Authors
Doney, Scott C.
Sailley, Sevrine F.
Sailley, Sevrine F.
Linked Authors
Alternative Title
Citable URI
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Date Created
Location
DOI
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Abstract
Populations
of
marine
species
wax
and
wane
over
time
and
space
reflecting
environmental
forcing,
biological
dynamics,
and
in
some
cases
human
perturbations
such
as
fishing,
habitat
destruction
and
climate
change.
The
growing
availability
of
multi‐decadal
observational
records
opens
new
windows
on
how
ocean
ecosystems
function,
but
the
analysis
and
interpretation
of
such
long
time-‐series
also
requires
new
mathematical
tools
and
conceptual
models.
Population
time-‐
series
often
show
strong
variations
at
decadal
time‐scales,
and
a
central
question
is
whether
this
arises
from
non‐linear
biological
processes
or
simply
tracking
of
external
physical
variability.
Borrowing
from
climate
research,
Di
Lorenzo
and
Ohman
develop
a
novel
approach
for
deciphering
links
between
physical
forcing
and
biological
response,
using
as
a
test
case
time‐series
of
marine
zooplankton
abundances
off
the
coast
of
California.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2013. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of National Academy of Sciences for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 110 (2013): 2438–2439, doi:10.1073/pnas.1222736110.