![]() We show how rising variance coupled to decreasing autocorrelation and skewness started 10–30 years before the transition to eutrophic lake conditions in both the empirical records and the model output, a finding that is consistent with flickering rather than critical slowing down4, 12. ![]() ![]() Here we combine empirical data from a lake-catchment system with a mathematical model and show that flickering can be detected from sparse data. Such signals for transitions in social–ecological systems have rarely been observed11, not the least because high-resolution time series are normally required. Such early warning signals10 may be due to the phenomenon of critical slowing down, which causes a system to recover slowly from small impacts, or to a flickering phenomenon, which causes a system to switch back and forth between alternative states in response to relatively large impacts. Studies of mathematical3, 4, 5 and experimental6, 7, 8, 9 systems have shown that systems may ‘wobble’ before a critical transition. N2 - There is a recognized need to anticipate tipping points, or critical transitions, in social–ecological systems1, 2. T1 - Flickering gives early warning signals of a critical transition to a eutrophic lake state : Letter Our results suggest that if environmental regimes are sufficiently affected by large external impacts that flickering is induced, then early warning signals of transitions in modern social–ecological systems may be stronger, and hence easier to identify, than previously thoug", Studies of mathematical3, 4, 5 and experimental6, 7, 8, 9 systems have shown that systems may before a critical transition. Our results suggest that if environmental regimes are sufficiently affected by large external impacts that flickering is induced, then early warning signals of transitions in modern social–ecological systems may be stronger, and hence easier to identify, than previously thougĪbstract = "There is a recognized need to anticipate tipping points, or critical transitions, in social–ecological systems1, 2. ![]() If you need anymore information, let me know.There is a recognized need to anticipate tipping points, or critical transitions, in social–ecological systems1, 2. I tried to see if there was a div block with position absolute over top, but all div blocks with this position should be disabled in tablet or phone view. I’m at a loss to what is causing this issue. I have not changed anything in the Style tab for this particular class, and it doesn’t appear to have any layout or position changes in the hover state. This is also an issue on other pages as well. However, recently, whenever I hover over the “Story” button or “Services” button on the homepage, the buttons have started to move and flicker. A few days ago, this mobile nav (which only appears on tablet, landscape phone, and portrait phone) worked perfectly and had no hover effect. I’m in need of some help with my mobile navigation bar I created.
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