Das Leibniz-Institut zur Analyse des Biodiversitätswandels

ist ein Forschungsmuseum der Leibniz Gemeinschaft

Detecting causality in complex ecosystems: lesson from tiger mosquitoes and implications for biodiversity research.

Termin: 
Do, 26.11.2015 - 17:15 Uhr
Ort: 
Hörsaal
Veranstaltungsart: 
Vortrag
Veranstaltungsreihe: 
Biologisches/Evolutionsbiologisches Kolloquium
Zielgruppe: 
Studierende
Vortragende / Vortragender: 
Dr. Arndt Telschow, Universität Münster

ACHTUNG: Der Vortrag wird in englischer Sprache gehalten!
There is growing empirical evidence that most ecological and bio-medical processes follow nonlinear dynamics. However, data analysis of nonlinear systems is fundamentally different from “standard statistics”. This is because each state of a nonlinear system depends on previous states in a nonlinear way. Recently, new methods were developed for the analysis of short (ecological) time series, including tests for causality between biotic or abiotic variables.

In the first part of the talk, I will give a brief introduction to nonlinear dynamics with a special emphasis on the problem of mirage correlations and the causality test convergent cross mapping (CCM) (Sugihara et al. 2012, Science).

In the second part, nonlinear methods are applied to the Polynesian tiger mosquito (Aedes polynesiensis), which is a main vector for dengue fever and lymphatic filariasis in the South Pacific. The times series analysis is based on a unique data set of a mosquito meta-population collected in French Polynesia over a period of more than two years.

We tested for causal interactions between climate variables and mosquito abundances using CCM, and found several previously undetected factors. A further key insight from this analysis is that subpopulations in close proximity (200m-5km) differ remarkably with respect to their dynamics and the environmental factors that affect their dynamics. As an outlook, I will discuss how dynamical thinking can lead to new research questions in biodiversity research, and problematize the issue of appropriate data collection, which is critical to make full usage of nonlinear time series analysis (e.g., for testing causal interactions).
 

Biologisches Kolloquium

Prof. Dr. H. Wägele
Zoologisches Forschungsmuseum Alexander Koenig,
Adenauerallee 160, 53113 Bonn
 
Prof. Dr. G. von der Emde
Institut für Zoologie, Poppelsdorfer Schloss,
Meckenheimer Allee 169, 53115 Bonn
 
Ort: Großer Hörsaal, Poppelsdorfer Schloß
Zeit: montags, 17.15 Uhr