CPM Seminar
Hierarchies of critical phenomena in marine ecologies
Frédéric Guichard
Department of Biology McGill University
Intrinsic processes operating at local and regional spatial scales can
control marine ecosystems: interactions between individual organisms
(~cm) and transport of organisms (larvae) between locations (~km). I
will describe a theoretical framework of large-scale coastal ecosystems
where local ecological interactions (i.e. disturbance and colonization)
between organisms is first described as an interacting particle system
(IPS) giving rise to “robust” scale-invariance in the
distribution of organisms at the landscape level (~100m). The model appears
to relax the separation of time scales as a requirement for SOC found in the
similar Forest-Fire Model (FFM). Landscapes ultimately become fragmented and
form discrete sites along the shore coupled through dispersal of larvae. I
thus present a model of regional coastal dynamics where sites are viewed
as coupled oscillators. At the large-scale the model predicts a phase
transition between 2 quasi-homogeneous phases controlled by the strength of
interactions between species. The transition drives the system from quasi
equilibrium to coherent dynamics and is marked by a critical interaction
strength value leading to scale-invariant distribution of abundance along
the coast. I discuss the implications of these findings for the persistence
of ecological systems, and for their response to large-scale environmental
changes. I conclude by indicating how model predictions can ultimately be
validated using large-scale ecological datasets.
Thursday, March 23rd 2006
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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