Generic Indicators for Loss of Resilience Before a Tipping Point Leading to Population Collapse
Theory predicts that the approach of catastrophic thresholds in natural systems (e.g., ecosystems,
the climate) may result in an increasingly slow recovery from small perturbations, a phenomenon
called critical slowing down. We used replicate laboratory populations of the budding yeast
Saccharomyces cerevisiae for direct observation of critical slowing down before population
collapse. We mapped the bifurcation diagram experimentally and found that the populations
became more vulnerable to disturbance closer to the tipping point. Fluctuations of population
density increased in size and duration near the tipping point, in agreement with the theory.
Our results suggest that indicators of critical slowing down can provide advance warning of
catastrophic thresholds and loss of resilience in a variety of dynamical systems.
SCIENCE VOL 336 1
Publication Date: 2012
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