Odum School of Ecology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia 30602, USA.
Nature. 2010 Sep 23;467(7314):456-9. doi: 10.1038/nature09389. Epub 2010 Sep 8.
During the decline to extinction, animal populations may present dynamical phenomena not exhibited by robust populations. Some of these phenomena, such as the scaling of demographic variance, are related to small size whereas others result from density-dependent nonlinearities. Although understanding the causes of population extinction has been a central problem in theoretical biology for decades, the ability to anticipate extinction has remained elusive. Here we argue that the causes of a population's decline are central to the predictability of its extinction. Specifically, environmental degradation may cause a tipping point in population dynamics, corresponding to a bifurcation in the underlying population growth equations, beyond which decline to extinction is almost certain. In such cases, imminent extinction will be signalled by critical slowing down (CSD). We conducted an experiment with replicate laboratory populations of Daphnia magna to test this hypothesis. We show that populations crossing a transcritical bifurcation, experimentally induced by the controlled decline in environmental conditions, show statistical signatures of CSD after the onset of environmental deterioration and before the critical transition. Populations in constant environments did not have these patterns. Four statistical indicators all showed evidence of the approaching bifurcation as early as 110 days (∼8 generations) before the transition occurred. Two composite indices improved predictability, and comparative analysis showed that early warning signals based solely on observations in deteriorating environments without reference populations for standardization were hampered by the presence of transient dynamics before the onset of deterioration, pointing to the importance of reliable baseline data before environmental deterioration begins. The universality of bifurcations in models of population dynamics suggests that this phenomenon should be general.
在灭绝衰退过程中,动物种群可能会表现出稳健种群所没有的动态现象。这些现象中的一些,如人口方差的比例缩放,与种群规模小有关,而另一些则是由密度依赖的非线性引起的。尽管理解种群灭绝的原因是理论生物学中的一个核心问题,但预测灭绝的能力仍然难以捉摸。在这里,我们认为种群衰退的原因是预测其灭绝的关键。具体来说,环境退化可能会导致种群动态的临界点,这对应于基础种群增长方程中的分岔,超过这个临界点,种群的衰退就几乎是不可避免的。在这种情况下,即将灭绝的信号将是关键的减速(CSD)。我们用实验室的大草履虫重复种群进行了一项实验,以检验这一假设。我们表明,跨越超临界分岔的种群,通过控制环境条件的下降来实验诱导,在环境恶化开始后和关键转变之前,表现出 CSD 的统计特征。在恒定环境中的种群没有这些模式。四个统计指标都在过渡发生前 110 天(约 8 代)就显示出了接近分岔的证据。两个综合指标提高了可预测性,比较分析表明,仅基于恶化环境中的观察而没有标准化的参考种群的早期预警信号,受到恶化开始前瞬态动力学的阻碍,这表明在环境恶化开始之前,可靠的基线数据非常重要。种群动态模型中分岔的普遍性表明,这种现象应该是普遍存在的。