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July 18, 2025

Ecosystem collapse patterns mirror magnetic material behavior under stress

Graphical abstract Credit: One Earth (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.oneear.2025.101358
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Graphical abstract Credit: One Earth (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.oneear.2025.101358

A new study in the journal One Earth reveals that the way ecosystems collapse—abruptly or gradually—may depend on internal complexity, much like how magnetic materials behave under stress.

The study, led by Professor John Dearing at the University of Southampton with colleagues from Rothamsted Research, Bangor University, and Edinburgh University, challenges the prevailing assumption that climate tipping points always happen suddenly. Instead, it shows that some large-scale Earth systems may be experiencing gradual collapses that are easy to miss, with profound implications for and planetary resilience.

"Some systems snap. Others sag," said Professor Simon Willcock of Rothamsted Research, one of the study team. "Our findings suggest that the classic model of abrupt tipping—like a lake suddenly turning green from algae—may not apply to some of Earth's most important systems, such as forests, ice sheets, or ."

To investigate, the researchers turned to an unlikely source: . In the lab, magnets can be pushed between alternative states using external fields. These stress-responses mirror how ecosystems shift under environmental pressure. The team found that materials with simpler, homogeneous structures showed abrupt, irreversible changes—akin to "hard" tipping points. But more complex materials exhibited 'soft' tipping, where changes occurred incrementally as internal components realigned.

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This analogy helps explain why large, diverse systems—like rainforests or ocean circulation—may appear stable even as they quietly reorganize under stress.

Key insights from the study:

Similar structural patterns across different spatial scales: Global tipping elements, ecosystems, and magnetic materials. Credit: One Earth (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.oneear.2025.101358
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Similar structural patterns across different spatial scales: Global tipping elements, ecosystems, and magnetic materials. Credit: One Earth (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.oneear.2025.101358

The authors warn that inaction could be fatal, as delayed responses allow stress to accumulate unnoticed—like frogs unaware that the water is boiling.

"Our work suggests we may already be crossing tipping points without realizing," said Dearing. "For too long, we've treated tipping points as dramatic collapses. These findings show that some systems may slide into collapse silently. That makes them even more dangerous. Slowing the rate of climate change is essential—not only to avoid catastrophic collapse, but to buy time for systems to adapt and recover."

"Slow changes can be deceptive," said co-author Professor Roy Thompson. "Laboratory observations of tipping points in magnetic materials give us a safe, controlled way to understand what we can't test directly in ecosystems and in the global climate system, without relying on computer models."

The study underscores the importance of scale, complexity, and timing in both modeling and managing . It calls for more nuanced definitions of tipping points, investment in high-resolution monitoring, and urgent action to reduce the pace of environmental stressors.

"This work flips the script on climate risk," said Willcock. "Not all tipping points are abrupt. Some are slow and silent—and we may already be inside them. If we wait for to scream, we'll have waited too long. The real danger is in systems that whisper while they fall apart."

More information: Reconciling global tipping point theories: insight from magnetic experiments, One Earth (2025). .

Journal information: One Earth

Provided by Rothamsted Research

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Ecosystem collapse can occur gradually or abruptly, depending on internal complexity, similar to stress responses in magnetic materials. Complex systems may reorganize slowly, masking early warning signs, while rapid climate change increases the risk of sudden transitions. Early intervention and high-resolution monitoring are crucial, as gradual collapses may be overlooked until recovery becomes difficult.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.