Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




FLORA AND FAUNA
Early warning signs of population collapse
by Anne Trafton for MIT News
Boston MA (SPX) Apr 15, 2013


MIT physicists studied early signs of population collapse in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Image: Wikimedia Commons/Masur.

Many factors - including climate change, overfishing or loss of food supply - can push a wild animal population to the brink of collapse. Ecologists have long sought ways to measure the risk of such a collapse, which could help wildlife and fishery managers take steps to protect endangered populations.

Last year, MIT physicists demonstrated that they could measure a population's risk of collapse by monitoring how fast it recovers from small disturbances, such as a food shortage or overcrowding. However, this strategy would likely require many years of data collection - by which time it could be too late to save the population.

In a paper appearing in the April 10 online edition of Nature, the same research team describes a new way to predict the risk of collapse, based on variations in population density in neighboring regions. Such information is easier to obtain than data on population fluctuations over time, making it potentially more useful, according to the researchers.

"Spatial data are more accessible," says Lei Dai, an MIT graduate student in physics and lead author of the study. "You can get them by satellite images, or you could just go out and do a survey."

Led by Jeff Gore, an assistant professor of physics, Dai and Kirill Korolev, a Pappalardo Postdoctoral Fellow, grew yeast in test tubes and tracked the populations as they approached collapse. Yeast cells cooperate with other members of the population: Each of the organisms secretes an enzyme that breaks down sucrose in the environment into smaller sugars that it can use as a food source. All of the yeast benefit from this process, so a population is most successful when it maintains a certain density - neither too low nor too high.

In last year's study, the researchers found that in populations of yeast that are subjected to increasingly stressful conditions, populations become less and less resilient to new disturbances until they reach a tipping point at which any small disruption could wipe out a population.

This phenomenon can be spotted quickly in yeast, which produces about 10 new generations per day, but measuring these population fluctuations for species such as fish or deer would take much more time. In hopes of finding more useful signals, the researchers turned their attention to spatial information.

There goes the neighborhood
In their new study, the researchers theorized a new type of indicator that they call "recovery length" - the spatial counterpart to recovery time. This idea is based on the observation that populations living near the boundary of a less hospitable habitat are affected, because the neighboring habitats are connected by migration.

Populations further away from the bad region gradually recover to equilibrium, and the spatial scale of this recovery can reveal a population's susceptibility to collapse, according to the researchers.

To test this idea, the researchers first established several linked yeast populations in a state of equilibrium. At the end of each day, a certain percentage of each population was transferred to adjacent test tubes, representing migration to adjacent regions.

The researchers then introduced a "bad" habitat, where only one in every 2,500 yeast survives from one day to the next. This reduction in population mimics what might happen in a natural population plagued by overfishing, or by a drastic reduction in its food supply.

The MIT team found that populations closest to the bad habitat had the hardest time maintaining an equilibrium state. Populations farther away maintained their equilibrium more easily.

"There's some distance you have to go away from the bad region in order to get recovery of the population density," Gore says. "How far you have to go before you reach equilibrium is the recovery length, and that tells you how close these populations are to collapse."

The recovery length varies based on how much stress the populations are already under.

To apply this finding to a natural population, population density would need to be measured in a range of adjacent areas at increasing distances from a good/bad boundary. This information could then be mapped to reveal the recovery length. "What's great about the recovery length is you don't need a long time series. You could just measure it at one moment in time," Gore says.

The MIT researchers are hoping to expand their studies to natural populations such as honeybees, fisheries or forests. They are also studying more complex experimental ecosystems involving several microbial species.

The research was funded by a Whitaker Health Sciences Fund Fellowship, a Pappalardo Fellowship, a National Institutes of Health Pathways to Independence Award and New Innovator Award, a National Science Foundation CAREER Award, a Sloan Research Fellowship, the Pew Scholars Program and the Allen Investigator Program.

.


Related Links
Massachusetts Institute Of Technology
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








FLORA AND FAUNA
World-first research will save koalas
Brisbane, Australia (SPX) Apr 15, 2013
The "holy grail" for understanding how and why koalas respond to infectious diseases has been uncovered in an Australian-led, world-first genome mapping project. The joint undertaking between QUT and The Australian Museum has unearthed a wealth of data, including the koala interferon gamma (IFN-g) gene - a chemical messenger that plays a key role in the iconic marsupial's defence against c ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
Enzymes from horse feces could hold secrets to streamlining biofuel production

Cost-saving measure to upgrade ethanol to butanol -- a better alternative to gasoline

'Pharmaceutical' approach boosts oil production from algae

Engineering algae to make the 'wonder material' nanocellulose for biofuels and more

FLORA AND FAUNA
Swarming robots could be the servants of the future

Robot ants successfully mimic real colony behavior

Small swarm of robots could do tasks

Robots joining China businesses, factories

FLORA AND FAUNA
U.S. leads in wind installations

Providing Capital and Technology, GE is Farming the Wind in America's Heartland with Enel Green Power

Wind skeptic British minister replaced

Using fluctuating wind power

FLORA AND FAUNA
China March auto sales hit record high: group

Yamaha plans $500 bike in India, eyes exports to China

US announces stricter gasoline standards

Japan venture to bring electric tuk-tuks to Asia

FLORA AND FAUNA
Activists plant North Pole flag to fight oil drilling

Falklands War to pervade Thatcher's funeral

University of Tennessee professor's research shows Gulf of Mexico resilient after spill

Natural soil bacteria pump new life into exhausted oil wells

FLORA AND FAUNA
GCC states demand IAEA inspections on Iran nuclear plant

EU to probe Bulgaria energy sector

Fukushima may delay nuclear energy growth

IAEA team to inspect Fukushima next week

FLORA AND FAUNA
Renewable Energy Won't Stop Climate Change

Is Tunisia the New Hot Spot for Energy Investors?

Jordan scrambles to secure energy resources

ADB report warns on Asian energy

FLORA AND FAUNA
Activist silenced as China island forests destroyed

SFU researchers help unlock pine beetle's Pandora's box

Russian activists angry after attacked journalist's death

Russian forest campaigner dies after 2008 attack




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement