Nature's Warning Signal (Abrupt tipping points)
http://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2015/12/a-warning-system-built-into-nature/421836/
Nestled in the northern Wisconsin woods, Peter Lake once brimmed with golden shiners, fatheads, and other minnows, which plucked algae-eating fleas from the murky water. Then, seven years ago, a crew of ecologists began stepping up the lakes population of predatory largemouth bass. To the 39 bass already present, they added 12, then 15 more a year later, and another 15 a month after that. The bass hunted down the minnows and drove survivors to the rocky shoreline, which gave fleas free rein to multiply and pick the water clean. Meanwhile, bass hatchlingsformerly gobbled up by the minnowsflourished, and in 2010, the bass population exploded to more than 1,000. The original algae-laced, minnow-dominated ecosystem was gone, and the reign of bass in clear water began.
Today, largemouth bass still swim rampant. Once that top predator is dominant, its very hard to dislodge, said Stephen Carpenter, an ecologist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, who led the experiment. You could do it, but its gonna cost you.
The Peter Lake experiment demonstrated a well-known problem with complex systems: They are sensitive beasts. Just as when the Earth periodically plunges into an ice age, or when grasslands turn to desert, fisheries suddenly collapse, or a person slumps into a deep depression, systems can drift toward an invisible edge, where only a small change is needed to touch off a dramatic and often disastrous transformation. But systems that exhibit such critical transitions tend to be so complicated and riddled with feedback loops that experts cannot hope to calculate in advance where their tipping points lieor how much additional tampering they can withstand before snapping irrevocably into a new state.
Why does this sound so familiar? Oh wait......