Non-equilibrium early-warning signals for critical transitions in ecological systems

Author:

Xu Li1ORCID,Patterson Denis23ORCID,Levin Simon Asher23ORCID,Wang Jin4

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Electroanalytical Chemistry, Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun, Jilin 130022, P.R. China

2. High Meadows Environmental Institute, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544

3. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ 08544

4. Department of Chemistry, Physics and Applied Mathematics, State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY 11794-3400

Abstract

Complex systems can exhibit sudden transitions or regime shifts from one stable state to another, typically referred to as critical transitions. It becomes a great challenge to identify a robust warning sufficiently early that action can be taken to avert a regime shift. We employ landscape-flux theory from nonequilibrium statistical mechanics as a general framework to quantify the global stability of ecological systems and provide warning signals for critical transitions. We quantify the average flux as the nonequilibrium driving force and the dynamical origin of the nonequilibrium transition while the entropy production rate as the nonequilibrium thermodynamic cost and thermodynamic origin of the nonequilibrium transition. Average flux, entropy production, nonequilibrium free energy, and time irreversibility quantified by the difference in cross-correlation functions forward and backward in time can serve as early warning signals for critical transitions much earlier than other conventional predictors. We utilize a classical shallow lake model as an exemplar for our early warning prediction. Our proposed method is general and can be readily applied to assess the resilience of many other ecological systems. The early warning signals proposed here can potentially predict critical transitions earlier than established methods and perhaps even sufficiently early to avert catastrophic shifts.

Funder

National Science Foundation of Jilin Province

National Science Foundation of China

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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