Poor performance of regime shift detection methods in marine ecosystems
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36267Dato
2024-08-10Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Regime shifts have been reported as ubiquitous features across the world’s oceans. Many regime shift detection methods are available,
but their performance is rarely evaluated, and the supporting evidence for regime shifts may be thin because of the nature of marine
ecological time series that are often short, autocorrelated, and uncertain. In the Norwegian Sea, a regime shift has been reported to have
occurred in the mid-2000s, with simultaneous changes in oceanography, plankton, and fish. Here, we evaluate the evidence for this
regime shift using four commonly used regime shift detection methods (Strucchange, STARS, EnvCpt, and Chronological Clustering) on
32 annual time series that describe the main components of the Norwegian Sea ecosystem, from hydrography and primary production
up to fish population metrics. We quantify the performance of each method by measuring its false-positive rate, i.e. the proportion
of times the method detects a regime shift that was not present in simulated control time series. Our results show that all methods
have high to very high false-positive rates. This challenges the evidence for a regime shift in the Norwegian Sea and questions earlier
reviews of regime shifts across the world’s oceans.
Forlag
Oxford University PressSitering
Haines, Planque, Buttay. Poor performance of regime shift detection methods in marine ecosystems. ICES Journal of Marine Science. 2024Metadata
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Copyright 2024 The Author(s)