Probing the limits of predictability: data assimilation of chaotic dynamics in complex food webs

The daunting complexity of ecosystems has led ecologists to use mathematical modelling to gain understanding of ecological relationships, processes and dynamics. In pursuit of mathematical tractability, these models use simplified descriptions of key patterns, processes and relationships observed in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Ecology letters 2018-01, Vol.21 (1), p.93-103
Hauptverfasser: Massoud, Elias C., Huisman, Jef, Benincà, Elisa, Dietze, Michael C., Bouten, Willem, Vrugt, Jasper A., Adler, Frederick
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The daunting complexity of ecosystems has led ecologists to use mathematical modelling to gain understanding of ecological relationships, processes and dynamics. In pursuit of mathematical tractability, these models use simplified descriptions of key patterns, processes and relationships observed in nature. In contrast, ecological data are often complex, scale‐dependent, space‐time correlated, and governed by nonlinear relations between organisms and their environment. This disparity in complexity between ecosystem models and data has created a large gap in ecology between model and data‐driven approaches. Here, we explore data assimilation (DA) with the Ensemble Kalman filter to fuse a two‐predator‐two‐prey model with abundance data from a 2600+ day experiment of a plankton community. We analyse how frequently we must assimilate measured abundances to predict accurately population dynamics, and benchmark our population model's forecast horizon against a simple null model. Results demonstrate that DA enhances the predictability and forecast horizon of complex community dynamics.
ISSN:1461-023X
1461-0248
DOI:10.1111/ele.12876