4.4 Article

Rising Variability, Not Slowing Down, as a Leading Indicator of a Stochastically Driven Abrupt Transition in a Dryland Ecosystem

Journal

AMERICAN NATURALIST
Volume 191, Issue 1, Pages E1-E14

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/694821

Keywords

early warning signals; critical transitions; stochastic transitions; dryland ecosystems; regime shifts; restoration

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31700373, 31600332]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS)
  3. Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)-Indian Institute of Science (IISc) Space Technology Cell
  4. Department of Biotechnology (DBT)-IISc Partnership Program
  5. Ministry of Environment, Forest, and Climate Change (MoEFCC), government of India
  6. Environmental Resilience and Sustainability Fellowships

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Complex systems can undergo abrupt state transitions near critical points. Theory and controlled experimental studies suggest that the approach to critical points can be anticipated by critical slowing down (CSD), that is, a characteristic slowdown in the dynamics. The validity of this indicator in field ecosystems, where stochasticity is important in driving transitions, remains unclear. We analyze long-term data from a dryland ecosystem in the Shapotou region of China and show that the ecosystem underwent an abrupt transition from a nearly bare to a moderate grass cover state. Prior to the transition, the system showed no (or weak) signatures of CSD but exhibited expected increasing trends in the variability of the grass cover, quantified by variance and skewness. These surprising results are consistent with the theoretical expectation of stochastically driven abrupt transitions that occur away from critical points; indeed, a driver of vegetationannual rainfallshowed rising variance prior to the transition. Our study suggests that rising variability can potentially serve as a leading indicator of stochastically driven transitions in real-world ecosystems.

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