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5.6.5 Chaos

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Thus, a model built around a density‐dependent, supposedly regulatory process (intraspecific competition) can lead to a very wide range of population dynamics. If a model population has even a moderate fundamental net reproductive rate (and the ability to leave 100 (= R) offspring in the next generation in a competition‐free environment is not unreasonable), and if it has a density‐dependent reaction which even moderately overcompensates, then far from being stable, it may fluctuate widely in numbers without the action of any extrinsic factor. The biological significance of this is the strong suggestion that even in an environment that is wholly constant and predictable, the intrinsic qualities of a population and the individuals within it may, by themselves, give rise to population dynamics with large and perhaps even chaotic fluctuations. The consequences of intraspecific competition are clearly not limited to ‘tightly controlled regulation’.

Two things are therefore clear. Firstly, time lags, high reproductive rates and overcompensating density dependence are capable (either alone or in combination) of producing all types of fluctuations in population density, without invoking any extrinsic cause. Secondly, and equally important, this has been made apparent by the analysis of mathematical models.

key characteristics of chaotic dynamics

In fact, the recognition that even simple ecological systems may contain the seeds of chaos led to chaos itself becoming a topic of interest amongst ecologists (Schaffer & Kot, 1986 ; Hastings et al., 1993 ; Perry et al., 2000). A detailed exposition of the nature of chaos is not appropriate here, but a few key points should be understood.

Firstly, the term ‘chaos’ may itself be misleading if it is taken to imply a fluctuation with absolutely no discernable pattern. Chaotic dynamics do not consist of a sequence of random numbers. On the contrary, there are tests (although they are not always easy to put into practice) designed to distinguish chaotic from random and other types of fluctuations. And since these patterns emerge from deterministic models (i.e. models with no random forces (stochasticity) incorporated), the term ‘deterministic chaos’ has been popularly used to describe them.

Secondly, fluctuations in chaotic ecological systems occur between definable upper and lower densities. Thus, in the model of intraspecific competition that we have discussed, the idea of ‘regulation’ has not been lost altogether, even in the chaotic region.

Third, however, unlike the behaviour of truly regulated systems, two similar population trajectories in a chaotic system will not tend to converge on (‘be attracted to’) the same equilibrium density or the same limit cycle (both of them ‘simple’ attractors). Rather, the behaviour of a chaotic system is governed by a ‘strange attractor’. Initially very similar trajectories become exponentially less and less like one another over time: chaotic systems exhibit ‘extreme sensitivity to initial conditions’.

Hence, and finally, the long‐term future behaviour of a chaotic system is effectively impossible to predict, and prediction becomes increasingly inaccurate as one moves further into the future. Even if we appear to have seen the system in a particular state before – and know precisely what happened subsequently last time – tiny (perhaps immeasurable) initial differences will be magnified progressively, and past experience will become of increasingly little value.

beyond chaos

This altered perspective opened up by an appreciation of chaos led initially to an excited optimism, but as Bjørnstad (2015) explains, ecologists grew steadily more sceptical. There were occasional demonstrations of apparent chaos in artificial laboratory environments (Costantino et al., 1997), but the unlikelihood of natural systems being devoid of random forces and having very few interacting elements, combined with technical difficulties in detecting the signature of chaos in real datasets (Bjørnstad & Grenfell, 2001), led to questions of how often, if ever, ecological systems are chaotic, and whether, practically, we could detect chaos in nature even if it existed. The fashion for studying chaos has largely passed. Nonetheless, the altered perspective – that unpredictability may be inherent in ecological systems without the involvement of major perturbations from outside the system – has been far more enduring. Ecology must aim to become a predictive science. Chaotic systems, if they exist, would set us some of the sternest challenges in prediction. But unanticipated shifts in dynamics from one pattern to another, and the transient dynamics that may link them, set similar challenges that continue to be taken up. We return to these in Chapters 14 and 17.

Ecology

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