Revealing the Organization of Complex Adaptive Systems through Multivariate Time Series Modeling

Revealing the adaptive responses of ecological, social, and economic systems to a transforming biosphere is crucial for understanding system resilience and preventing collapse. However, testing the theory that underpins complex adaptive system organization (e.g., panarchy theory) is challenging. We...

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Main Authors: David G. Angeler, Stina Drakare, Richard K. Johnson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2011-09-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol16/iss3/art5/
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spelling doaj-e8635dcfb5d0407b94ccc2f30e528e4b2020-11-25T01:07:29ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872011-09-01163510.5751/ES-04175-1603054175Revealing the Organization of Complex Adaptive Systems through Multivariate Time Series ModelingDavid G. Angeler0Stina Drakare1Richard K. Johnson2Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Aquatic Sciences and AssessmentSwedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Aquatic Sciences and AssessmentSwedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Aquatic Sciences and AssessmentRevealing the adaptive responses of ecological, social, and economic systems to a transforming biosphere is crucial for understanding system resilience and preventing collapse. However, testing the theory that underpins complex adaptive system organization (e.g., panarchy theory) is challenging. We used multivariate time series modeling to identify scale-specific system organization and, by extension, apparent resilience mechanisms. We used a 20-year time series of invertebrates and phytoplankton from 26 Swedish lakes to test the proposition that a few key-structuring environmental variables at specific scales create discontinuities in community dynamics. Cross-scale structure was manifested in two independent species groups within both communities across lakes. The first species group showed patterns of directional temporal change, which was related to environmental variables that acted at broad spatiotemporal scales (reduced sulfate deposition, North Atlantic Oscillation). The second species group showed fluctuation patterns, which often could not be explained by environmental variables. However, when significant relationships were found, species-group trends were predicted by variables (total organic carbon, nutrients) that acted at narrower spatial scales (i.e., catchment and lake). Although the sets of environmental variables that predicted the species groups differed between phytoplankton and invertebrates, the scale-specific imprints of keystone environmental variables for creating cross-scale structure were clear for both communities. Temporal trends of functional groups did not track the observed structural changes, suggesting functional stability despite structural change. Our approach allows for identifying scale-specific patterns and processes, thus providing opportunities for better characterization of complex adaptive systems organization and dynamics. This, in turn, holds potential for more accurate evaluation of resilience in disparate system types (ecological, social, economic).http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol16/iss3/art5/complex adaptive systems dynamicscomplex adaptive systems organizationcross-scale structurediscontinuitiesenvironmental variablesinvertebrateslakespanarchyphytoplanktonresiliencetime series modeling
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David G. Angeler
Stina Drakare
Richard K. Johnson
spellingShingle David G. Angeler
Stina Drakare
Richard K. Johnson
Revealing the Organization of Complex Adaptive Systems through Multivariate Time Series Modeling
Ecology and Society
complex adaptive systems dynamics
complex adaptive systems organization
cross-scale structure
discontinuities
environmental variables
invertebrates
lakes
panarchy
phytoplankton
resilience
time series modeling
author_facet David G. Angeler
Stina Drakare
Richard K. Johnson
author_sort David G. Angeler
title Revealing the Organization of Complex Adaptive Systems through Multivariate Time Series Modeling
title_short Revealing the Organization of Complex Adaptive Systems through Multivariate Time Series Modeling
title_full Revealing the Organization of Complex Adaptive Systems through Multivariate Time Series Modeling
title_fullStr Revealing the Organization of Complex Adaptive Systems through Multivariate Time Series Modeling
title_full_unstemmed Revealing the Organization of Complex Adaptive Systems through Multivariate Time Series Modeling
title_sort revealing the organization of complex adaptive systems through multivariate time series modeling
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2011-09-01
description Revealing the adaptive responses of ecological, social, and economic systems to a transforming biosphere is crucial for understanding system resilience and preventing collapse. However, testing the theory that underpins complex adaptive system organization (e.g., panarchy theory) is challenging. We used multivariate time series modeling to identify scale-specific system organization and, by extension, apparent resilience mechanisms. We used a 20-year time series of invertebrates and phytoplankton from 26 Swedish lakes to test the proposition that a few key-structuring environmental variables at specific scales create discontinuities in community dynamics. Cross-scale structure was manifested in two independent species groups within both communities across lakes. The first species group showed patterns of directional temporal change, which was related to environmental variables that acted at broad spatiotemporal scales (reduced sulfate deposition, North Atlantic Oscillation). The second species group showed fluctuation patterns, which often could not be explained by environmental variables. However, when significant relationships were found, species-group trends were predicted by variables (total organic carbon, nutrients) that acted at narrower spatial scales (i.e., catchment and lake). Although the sets of environmental variables that predicted the species groups differed between phytoplankton and invertebrates, the scale-specific imprints of keystone environmental variables for creating cross-scale structure were clear for both communities. Temporal trends of functional groups did not track the observed structural changes, suggesting functional stability despite structural change. Our approach allows for identifying scale-specific patterns and processes, thus providing opportunities for better characterization of complex adaptive systems organization and dynamics. This, in turn, holds potential for more accurate evaluation of resilience in disparate system types (ecological, social, economic).
topic complex adaptive systems dynamics
complex adaptive systems organization
cross-scale structure
discontinuities
environmental variables
invertebrates
lakes
panarchy
phytoplankton
resilience
time series modeling
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol16/iss3/art5/
work_keys_str_mv AT davidgangeler revealingtheorganizationofcomplexadaptivesystemsthroughmultivariatetimeseriesmodeling
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