Complexity, Collective Effects and Modelling of Ecosystems: formation, function and stability
Abstract
We discuss the relevance of studying ecology within the framework of Complexity Science from a statistical mechanics approach. Ecology is concerned with understanding how systems level properties emerge out of the multitude of interactions amongst large numbers of components, leading to ecosystems that possess the prototypical characteristics of complex systems. We argue that statistical mechanics is at present the best methodology available to obtain a quantitative description of complex systems, and that ecology is in urgent need of ``integrative'' approaches that are quantitative and non-stationary. We describe examples where combining statistical mechanics and ecology has led to improved ecological modelling and, at the same time, broadened the scope of statistical mechanics.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0709.2015,
title = {Complexity, Collective Effects and Modelling of Ecosystems: formation, function and stability},
author = {Henrik Jeldtoft Jensen and Elsa Arcaute},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0709.2015},
year = {2007}
}
Comments
11 pages and 1 figure