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  • Testing, testing, one, two, three.

  • When your band is trying to perform, feedback is an annoying obstacle,

  • but in the grand orchestra of nature, feedback is not only beneficial,

  • it's what makes everything work.

  • What exactly is feedback?

  • The key element, whether in sound, the environment or social science,

  • is a phenomenon called mutual causal interaction,

  • where x affects y, y affects x, and so on,

  • creating an ongoing process called a feedback loop.

  • And the natural world is full of these mechanisms

  • formed by the links between living and nonliving things

  • that build resilience by governing the way populations

  • and food webs respond to events.

  • When plants die, the dead material enriches the soil with humus,

  • a stable mass of organic matter, providing moisture and nutrients

  • for other plants to grow.

  • The more plants grow and die, the more humus is produced,

  • allowing even more plants to grow, and so on.

  • This is an example of positive feedback,

  • an essential force in the buildup of ecosystems.

  • But it's not called positive feedback because it's beneficial.

  • Rather, it is positive because it amplifies a particular effect or change

  • from previous conditions.

  • These positive, or amplifying, loops can also be harmful,

  • like when removing a forest makes it vulnerable to erosion,

  • which removes organic matter and nutrients from the earth,

  • leaving less plants to anchor the soil, and leading to more erosion.

  • In contrast, negative feedback diminishes or counteracts changes in an ecosystem

  • to maintain a more stable balance.

  • Consider predators and their prey.

  • When lynx eat snowshoe hares, the reduce their population,

  • but this drop in the lynx's food source will soon cause their own population to decline,

  • reducing the predation rate and allowing the hare population to increase again.

  • The ongoing cycle creates an up and down wavelike pattern,

  • maintaining a long-term equilibrium and allowing a food chain to persist over time.

  • Feedback processes might seem counterintuitive because many of us

  • are used to more predictable linear scenarios of cause and effect.

  • For instance, it seems simple enough that

  • spraying pesticides would help plants grow by killing pest insects,

  • but it may trigger a host of other unexpected reactions.

  • For example, if spraying pushes down the insect population,

  • its predators will have less food.

  • As their population dips,

  • the reduced predation would allow the insect population to rise,

  • counteracting the effects of our pesticides.

  • Note that each feedback is the product of the links in the loop.

  • Add one negative link and it will reverse the feedback force entirely,

  • and one weak link will reduce the effect of the entire feedback considerably.

  • Lose a link, and the whole loop is broken.

  • But this is only a simple example,

  • since natural communities consist not of separate food chains,

  • but networks of interactions.

  • Feedback loops will often be indirect, occurring through longer chains.

  • A food web containing twenty populations can generate thousands of loops

  • of up to twenty links in length.

  • But instead of forming a disordered cacophany,

  • feedback loops in ecological systems play together,

  • creating regular patterns just like multiple instruments,

  • coming together to create a complex but harmonious piece of music.

  • Wide-ranging negative feedbacks keep the positive feedbacks in check,

  • like drums maintaining a rhythm.

  • You can look at the way a particular ecosystem functions within its unique habitat

  • as representing its trademark sound.

  • Ocean environments dominated by predator-prey interactions,

  • and strong negative and positive loops stabilized by self-damping feedback,

  • are powerful and loud, with many oscillations.

  • Desert ecosystems, where the turn over of biomass is slow,

  • and the weak feedbacks loops through dead matter are more like a constant drone.

  • And the tropical rainforest, with its great diversity of species,

  • high nutrient turnover, and strong feedbacks among both living and dead matter,

  • is like a lush panoply of sounds.

  • Despite their stabilizing effects,

  • many of these habitats and their ecosystems develop and change over time,

  • as do the harmonies they create.

  • Deforestation may turn lush tropics into a barren patch,

  • like a successful ensemble breaking up after losing its star performers.

  • But an abandoned patch of farmland may also become a forest over time,

  • like a garage band growing into a magnificent orchestra.

Testing, testing, one, two, three.

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TED-Ed】フィードバックループ。自然はどのようにしてそのリズムを得るのか - Anje-Marargriet Neutel (【TED-Ed】Feedback loops: How nature gets its rhythms - Anje-Margriet Neutel)

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    Ashley Chen に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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