How spatiotemporal dynamics can enhance ecosystem resilience
Publication date
2025-03-18
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Abstract
We study how self-organization in systems showing complex spatiotemporal dynamics can increase ecosystem resilience. We consider a general simple model that includes positive feedback as well as negative feedback mediated by an inhibitor. We apply this model to Posidonia oceanica meadows, where positive and negative feedbacks are well documented, and there is empirical evidence of the role of sulfide accumulation, toxic for the plant, in driving complex spatiotemporal dynamics. We describe a progressive transition from homogeneous meadows to extinction through dynamical regimes that allow the ecosystem to avoid the typical ecological tipping points of homogeneous vegetation covers. A predictable sequence of distinct dynamical regimes is observed as mortality is continuously increased: turbulent regimes, formation of spirals and wave trains, and isolated traveling pulses or expanding rings, the latter being a harbinger of ecosystem collapse, however far beyond the tipping point of the homogeneous cover. The model used in this paper is general, and the results can be applied to other plant–soil spatially extended systems, regardless of the mechanisms behind negative and positive feedbacks.
Keywords
excitability, plant–soil interactions, resilience, traveling pulses, vegetation patterns, General
Citation
Moreno-Spiegelberg, P, Rietkerk, M & Gomila, D 2025, 'How spatiotemporal dynamics can enhance ecosystem resilience', Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, vol. 122, no. 11, e2412522122. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2412522122