Fractal measures of spatial pattern as a heuristic for return rate in vegetative systems

Measurement of population persistence is a long-standing problem in ecology; in particular, whether it is possible to gain insights into persistence without long time-series. Fractal measurements of spatial patterns, such as the Korcak exponent or boundary dimension, have been proposed as indicators...

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Main Authors: M. A. Irvine, E. L. Jackson, E. J. Kenyon, K. J. Cook, M. J. Keeling, J. C. Bull
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2016-01-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150519
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spelling doaj-60a6759ed5b94cfbb24fbc2b1499f7c82020-11-25T03:59:24ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032016-01-013310.1098/rsos.150519150519Fractal measures of spatial pattern as a heuristic for return rate in vegetative systemsM. A. IrvineE. L. JacksonE. J. KenyonK. J. CookM. J. KeelingJ. C. BullMeasurement of population persistence is a long-standing problem in ecology; in particular, whether it is possible to gain insights into persistence without long time-series. Fractal measurements of spatial patterns, such as the Korcak exponent or boundary dimension, have been proposed as indicators of the persistence of underlying dynamics. Here we explore under what conditions a predictive relationship between fractal measures and persistence exists. We combine theoretical arguments with an aerial snapshot and time series from a long-term study of seagrass. For this form of vegetative growth, we find that the expected relationship between the Korcak exponent and persistence is evident at survey sites where the population return rate can be measured. This highlights a limitation of the use of power-law patch-size distributions and other indicators based on spatial snapshots. Moreover, our numeric simulations show that for a single species and a range of environmental conditions that the Korcak–persistence relationship provides a link between temporal dynamics and spatial pattern; however, this relationship is specific to demographic factors, so we cannot use this methodology to compare between species.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150519return ratefractal growthself-organizationpersistenceecological indicatorskorcak exponent
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. A. Irvine
E. L. Jackson
E. J. Kenyon
K. J. Cook
M. J. Keeling
J. C. Bull
spellingShingle M. A. Irvine
E. L. Jackson
E. J. Kenyon
K. J. Cook
M. J. Keeling
J. C. Bull
Fractal measures of spatial pattern as a heuristic for return rate in vegetative systems
Royal Society Open Science
return rate
fractal growth
self-organization
persistence
ecological indicators
korcak exponent
author_facet M. A. Irvine
E. L. Jackson
E. J. Kenyon
K. J. Cook
M. J. Keeling
J. C. Bull
author_sort M. A. Irvine
title Fractal measures of spatial pattern as a heuristic for return rate in vegetative systems
title_short Fractal measures of spatial pattern as a heuristic for return rate in vegetative systems
title_full Fractal measures of spatial pattern as a heuristic for return rate in vegetative systems
title_fullStr Fractal measures of spatial pattern as a heuristic for return rate in vegetative systems
title_full_unstemmed Fractal measures of spatial pattern as a heuristic for return rate in vegetative systems
title_sort fractal measures of spatial pattern as a heuristic for return rate in vegetative systems
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Measurement of population persistence is a long-standing problem in ecology; in particular, whether it is possible to gain insights into persistence without long time-series. Fractal measurements of spatial patterns, such as the Korcak exponent or boundary dimension, have been proposed as indicators of the persistence of underlying dynamics. Here we explore under what conditions a predictive relationship between fractal measures and persistence exists. We combine theoretical arguments with an aerial snapshot and time series from a long-term study of seagrass. For this form of vegetative growth, we find that the expected relationship between the Korcak exponent and persistence is evident at survey sites where the population return rate can be measured. This highlights a limitation of the use of power-law patch-size distributions and other indicators based on spatial snapshots. Moreover, our numeric simulations show that for a single species and a range of environmental conditions that the Korcak–persistence relationship provides a link between temporal dynamics and spatial pattern; however, this relationship is specific to demographic factors, so we cannot use this methodology to compare between species.
topic return rate
fractal growth
self-organization
persistence
ecological indicators
korcak exponent
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.150519
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