English

Second-order Phase Transition in Phytoplankton Trait Dynamics

Populations and Evolution 2020-05-20 v1 Biological Physics Cell Behavior

Abstract

Key traits of unicellular species, like cell size, often follow scale-free or self-similar distributions, hinting at the possibility of an underlying critical process. However, linking such empirical scaling laws to the critical regime of realistic individual-based model classes is difficult. Here we reveal new empirical scaling evidence associated with a transition in the population and chlorophyll dynamics of phytoplankton. We offer a possible explanation for these observations by deriving scaling laws in the vicinity of the critical point of a new universality class of non-local cell growth and division models. This `criticality hypothesis' can be tested through new scaling predictions derived for our model class, for the response of chlorophyll distributions to perturbations. The derived scaling laws may also be generalized to other cellular traits and environmental drivers relevant to phytoplankton ecology.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2004.00399,
  title  = {Second-order Phase Transition in Phytoplankton Trait Dynamics},
  author = {Jenny Held and Tom Lorimer and Francesco Pomati and Ruedi Stoop and Carlo Albert},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.00399},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

Companion paper in BioRxiv https://doi.org/10.1101/679209

R2 v1 2026-06-23T14:35:14.351Z