Lemming Population Flux Solved: Mass Suicide Not to Blame 181
quogmire writes "Australia's ABC reports that biologists from the Universities of Finland and Freiburg (Germany) have finally solved the question of lemming population fluctuations once thought to be caused by lemmings mass-suiciding by plunging off cliffs. 'Lemming populations, they say, surge spectacularly and fall just as quickly, thanks to the combined feasting of four predators: the stoat, arctic fox, snowy owl and a seabird called the long-tailed skua.' The original article (Login required) is published in Science."
Don't worry if you ever lose Lemmings off a cliff (Score:3, Funny)
good! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:good! (Score:2)
Re:good! (Score:2)
I thought it was (Score:5, Funny)
Anyone else think this was about computer Lemmings (Score:1)
Re:Anyone else think this was about computer Lemmi (Score:1)
"I thought Lemming blew themselves up in the game... wait, why is the Science journal publishing this crap?... Oh, they're talking about the real Lemmings."
"Computer Lemmings"? You mean Windows users? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:"Computer Lemmings"? You mean Windows users? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Pingus (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Pingus (Score:1)
Re:Pingus (Score:2, Interesting)
I played some early pingus-demo (4 levels i think) and I didn't find it _that_ bad at all.
Ofcourse it's not the original lemmings and most of the levels lacked the "Doh!"-effect of the original, but it is definately worth a look also for those who played the original lemmings back and forth.
Post-It-Side-Note: I didn't really like the original lemmings past Lemmings II. Some of the bonus packs (X-Mas Lemmings etc.) were nice. But starting with Lemmings III they put in so many new modes (and very bad one
Re:Pingus (Score:1)
Re:Pingus (Score:1)
Worms 3D seems to be pretty cool though if you like that sorta game, download the demo [3dgamers.com], I'll be buying it when its out.
Re:Pingus (Score:1)
I'm curious if they could actually make worms "work" in 3d. Lemmings3d was so awful, I didn't even bother to finish level 1. (Playtime: ~45 minutes)
Re:Pingus (Score:1)
Re:Pingus (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Pingus (Score:2)
This is good news... (Score:5, Funny)
Suicide theory is a fraud! (Score:5, Informative)
It's well known, by me at least, that the whole 'lemming suicide' thing was something that Disney cooked up during their 'bad documentary' era. In this case the lemmings were hearded off a cliff by the documentary crew, and was filmed as a 'mass suicide'.
I've seen some pretty amusing/sad documentaries that came out of Disney, including one that had the antics of a Jaguar eating various creatrues. It was OBVIOUS that it was a jaguar in a rather well done habitat where they threw in various animals, mostly eels, for the jaguar to attack. It was exceptionally amusing, but sad, too, that they thought to do something like this and pass it off as truth.
Re:Suicide theory is a fraud! (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.snopes.com/disney/films/lemmings.htm
Re:Suicide theory is a fraud! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Suicide theory is a fraud! (Score:1)
Although this was a long time ago, Disney's morals still seem to wallow at this level.
Re:Suicide theory is a fraud! (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess they thought it was only the end product that mattered.
My favorite was Killime (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Suicide theory IS a fraud, Snopes: (Score:2)
'Lemmings were induced into jumping off a cliff for this Disney nature film' [snopes.com]
...surely there's SOMETHING else more worthy of study.
Snopes.com weighs in on the Disney story... (Score:2)
http://www.snopes.com/disney/films/lemmings.htm
Re:Suicide theory is a fraud! (Score:1)
Don't penguins [freshmeat.net]kill themselves too?
Re:Suicide theory is a fraud! (Score:2)
There is a possibly confusing scenario of kinship selection (eg putting yourself in danger by protecting your offspring, deny
sounds like exceprt from formula mystery novel (Score:5, Funny)
Re:sounds like exceprt from formula mystery novel (Score:3, Interesting)
The person's excuse was that he was a poor college student and needed the money. Makes one wonder what other atrocities have been committed by poor college students? *grin*
Re:sounds like exceprt from formula mystery novel (Score:2)
Mostly, eating a lot of ramen.
Oh, crap (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Oh, crap (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Oh, crap (Score:1)
Or how to make crawl on a P IV 2GHz a game that was fast on a 386 16MHz...
Re:Oh, crap (Score:1)
Not obsolete, just different (Score:2)
And you thought Disney was evil before... (Score:1)
Reported since at least the Eighties (Score:1)
Note the references on the Snopes page, which are years earlier.
I first heard about it in a Boston Globe article [newsbank.com] in 1987. Boston Globe
aha! (Score:5, Funny)
Not true (Score:1, Redundant)
Wow... (Score:1)
Someone needs to... (Score:5, Funny)
The last installment was a (Score:2)
Re:Someone needs to... (Score:1)
I'm sceptical (Score:5, Funny)
Oh no! (Score:5, Funny)
*POP*
Re:Oh no! (Score:1)
Oh no...
More Lemmings !
Deja vu all over again (Score:1, Interesting)
So why should it be surprising that populations of lemmings are chaotic?
What, exactly, is the news here?
Re:Deja vu all over again (Score:2)
Re:Deja vu all over again (Score:2)
It's not news really, that cycle has been going on for centuries, probably millenia before it was posted on slashdot... I guess it kind of depends on your definition of news.
<fight... urge..... to... make... crack-shot comment>
Re:Deja vu all over again (Score:3, Insightful)
Even my fathers high-school math books had examples of populations of two animals, one predator, and one herbivore. This is about the simplest differential equation you can get, and has probably been well-known for quite a few centuries. If anyone has felt the need to use chaos theory here, they must clearly have worked with completely different example
Re:Deja vu all over again (Score:1)
Chaos theory was well established by 1989. The term "chaos" was coined in 1975 (Li & Yorke), and Lorenz' original paper was in 1963.
Carrying capacity (Score:2, Insightful)
At the moment, the western industrialised nations are fairly steady state but the developing and 3rd world nations are definitely not. We can look forward to wars over resources in the relatively near future (have they started already, iraq just the preque
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:2, Insightful)
Gang violence, school shootings, "going postal"?
We pack a lot of large, predatory animals with a complex social structure based on submission/dominance into small spaces with artificial local shortages.
Can you say, "Too may rats in the cage," boys and girls? I knew you could.
KFG
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:2)
Gang violence, school shootings, "going postal"?
By that logic, Hong Kong and Tokyo should have the highest violent crime rates in the world...
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:2, Interesting)
It is a mistake to consider that people are rats, or dogs, or chimpanzees. This does not preclude the idea that studying the behaviour of such cannot reveal to us clues about our own behaviours.
Nor did I even imply that violence is the only possible response to overcrowding and local shortages. Since it is not there is no reason to imply direct proportionali
Addendum (Score:1)
Boxing is not a crime. Boxing is violent.
Violence can increase as violent crime decreases. There is no logical connection between crime and violence, only a social connection based on local mores.
KFG
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:2)
For example in India:
Birth Rate per 1k @1970 - 41.2
Birth Rate per 1k @1995 - 28.3
Sure improved medicine helps but so does the education and rise of women's rights in societies. We are currently in the end of our world's population explosion for humans.
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:5, Interesting)
For example, if you assume that the population is governed by a continuous-time model, i.e. by a differential equation, then it is not really possible for a population to exceed a carrying capacity, and then crash. What happens is that the population asymptotically approaches the carrying capacity, but can never go above it. I think it is reasonable to put humans in this case, as our growth rate is a smooth frunction of time (no breeding season, for example).
Aside note: for those who may not know, the term "carrying capacity" is a term used in population dynamics which sort of represents the available resources. In most models, what happens is that there is some amount of population which can be supported by the existing resources, and if the population is below that, it should grow, and above that, it should shrink. Most "reasonable" models of population dynamics have such a carrying capacity, and I can even state a theorem: if you have any model where the growth rate of a species depends on its size, AND it is true that this growth rate becomes negative for some sufficiently large value of the population, then you will have a carrying capacity. Furthermore, if nothing in the system changes, the population will approach this value and stay there forever.
Now, I'm not saying a crash is impossible, but you need a more complicated system. There are several ways to add complexity to the system. One way is to consider a predator-prey type of system, but of course humans have nothing which can really be called a predator. The only thing I can think of is some sort of disease, but this leads to a different model altogether (some sort of "epidemological model"), and these models rarely predict population crashes, as they have a different character, which is disease needs to be carried by disease-carrying individuals (ok, duh) but then these tend to die out. So the predator carries its own destruction around with it, in some sense, and it corrects itself.
Another postulate one can make, and I think this is somewhat reasonable, is that the carrying capacity of the earth might change radically in the future (and of course, radically downward would be the interesting case in this discussion). This could happen any number of ways. And if it turns out that the carrying capacity moves on some very quick timescale (much more rapid than the change in growth of the population), then we could see a "crash". For example, if it turned out that our ability to grow food took a big hit for some reason or another, then this could happen.
One last way to get population crashes is to consider the case of the discrete system. For example, this does apply to species which have a discrete (say, yearly) breeding system. The population does not change smoothly over time, but is simply a function of one year to the next. It is somewhat surprising, but true, that the dynamics of a population with a discrete model can be much more complicated than those with a continuous model. In fact, a discrete model can actually have what satisfies the mathematical definition of "chaos". Thus you can see any type of behaviour you might imagine, including crashes, but also including periodicity (say, a 17-year cycle for population values). I do not think it is reasonable to assume that humanity can be modeled by this sort of model, even in a coarse-grained sense, because we breed day in and day out all the time. This (and this is somewhat surprising) makes our population a much more stable quantity.
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:1)
If your model does not predict poplution crashes, and there are, in fact, population crashes, you have problem. Your model is not very good.
You have two choices... change your model, or exterminate the subject of your model and get rid of all the evidence...
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:1)
What makes life complicated is there are tons of models out there, and who knows which one goes with which real system? That's why scientists get paid the "big bucks". Now that is tongue-in-cheek.
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:2, Informative)
This is very true. But it is true in the one-dimensional case, which I claim is the case for the dynamics of the population of humans.
All that being said, why does the model for the population have to be one-dimensional? This is a reasonable objection. An answer to that is, no matter how many dimensions the system has, there should be a way to coarse-grain it and get an essentially 1-D system.
For example, let the population of humans
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:2)
I think they haven't "already started", they've been going on for at least 30 years since the first Petroleum crisis of the seventies.
Aside from that though, the earth is humoungous, we will kill each other well before we run out of harvestable food bearing land. Just a number: something 80% of american produce is wasted (in transport or other places).
The reason ethiopia doesn't have food is not exactly because they don't have l
Re:Carrying capacity (Score:1)
I think they haven't "already started", they've been going on for at least 30 years since the first Petroleum crisis of the seventies.
I'd go even further. I'd say almost all wars in human history were, at least to some degree, a fight over limited resources. At the very least, once colonization became a major factor in, say, 1500 or so, that's all it's been about. The big boys fighting over the resources...
Long-tailed Skua (Score:1)
Beyond the article... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Beyond the article... (Score:1)
RTFA? (Score:4, Informative)
But I just wanted to point out that the ABC article is somewhat misleading. The original research article at no point addresses or attempts to refute the mass-suicide myth. Because, honestly, no scientist believed that was possible. The question they considered was much more reasonable: do the large deviations come from predators eating lemmings, or from a lack of vegatation for the lemmings to eat? It seems as though they have resolved that the crashes in population come from predator over-population, not from food scarcity.
This article will probably not shake the foundations of population dynamics. As some other posters have pointed out, it is not so surprising that one sees immense highs and massive crashes in a predator-prey system, because these phenomena exist even in simple mathematical models of pred-prey systems. So for a mathematician this should fly right under the radar.
On the other hand, to a population dynamics guy, this is somewhat interesting, as in that field it is typically considered hard to model these dynamics accurately. It seems as though these guys have determined some parameters in the population dynamics model experimentally, and this is what it is interesting.
Suicider Lemmings And Bomber Blemmings ... (Score:1, Offtopic)
I know that POTUS has defined it in pretty much black and white, and the LUNATIC calls them the deadenders, the military calls them operatives
Re:Suicider Lemmings And Bomber Blemmings ... (Score:1)
Thou shalt not steal.
Thou shalt not kill.
Etc.
If you believe you belong to God than harming yourself, God's property, is a sin. I have a friend who cannot be buried in his family plot because he has
Re:Suicider Lemmings And Bomber Blemmings ... (Score:2)
Re:Suicider Lemmings And Bomber Blemmings ... (Score:2)
Your response seems to assume that there is no such thing as objective truth, at least with regard to human behavior.
I would take that as an axiom. :)
How is our sense of morality so superior that it overrides his judgement? Obviously, there must be something in our morality that does override the judgement of Adolf Hitler.
I don't think there's anything that says it's right for our sense of morality to override his, and the fundamentalists you discuss later in your post. I do think that you are mostly
Re:Suicider Lemmings And Bomber Blemmings ... (Score:2)
First of all, by your logic you can't fault me for hating such bombers, because I believe them to be guilty. So if that's really your stance, you can just stop now.
NOt at all. I agree with you that what they're doing is wrong. :)
But let us continue. For one, regardless of whether you believe the victims to be innocent or guilty, I think you might agree that summary execution is not in order. What's more, the Right Decision is NOT only based on individual world view. If that were so, then if I think yo
What a stoater (Score:1)
and this ..
This page was generated by a Group of Trained Rabbits for RabidStoat (689404) it's been quite a day !
Natural Selection? (Score:1)
Lets go! (Score:1)
*sounds of lemmings exploding*
Caribou and animal suicides (Score:1)
Also, it is interesting that suicidal behavior among animals does exist. This Everything2 node [everything2.com] provides some very interesting informa
This is new information? (Score:3, Interesting)
Apart from the "University of Finland" and all the cutesy Lemmings jokes, does this strike anyone as horrificly unscientific? I mean, it's been observed for ages that the growth of the population of the prey causes a growth in population of the predator. Then your population growth for the lemmings looks something like:
dL/dt = bL/2 - hP
where L is the lemming population, b is the average number of lemmings born in a time interval, P is the number of predators and h is some constant. P on the other hand is related to L by some observed relation:
dP/dt ~ L
Given suitable values for b and h we can predict the behaviour of the lemming population without having to invent catastrophic events to explain the fluctuations of L without any empirical evidence to support them.
Re:This is new information? (Score:2)
Re:This is new information? (Score:2)
One of the problems was that not all of the predators involved in the cycle have lemmings as their primary food - only the stoat do. The other predators that eat lemmings only resort to lemmings when they are so plentiful that hunting them is too easy to miss out on.
Another issue was that the lemming cycle is extreme
Parallels closer to home (Score:1, Insightful)
Guess what ? 3 years later, there was a glut and they couldn't find jobs.
Parallels with today's job market anyone ?
Parallels with lemming population ?
Survival Strategies (Score:4, Interesting)
"University of Finland" (Score:1)
Dodos (Score:1)
http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/expeditions/tre
Lemmings are Terrorists (Score:2, Funny)
(double clicks the mushroom cloud)
OH NO!
Re:Origin of this legend (Score:2)
Actually, it was perpetuated and made into a mass-market notion by Disney, but they didn't think that up by themselves. They just made it worse.
I guess the credits didn't include the claim "no animals were harmed during the making of this movie"...
"Dozens of animals were hurled off a cliff during the making of this documentory." more likelly...
But that disclaimer allways makes me wonder if the filmakers forcibly made the entire earth v
Re:Origin of this legend (Score:2)
I agree with your point. In fact preventing harm to animals is much harder than that, since almost all animals are harmed by... other hungry animals. That and starvation (life at carrying capacity ain't easy).
Re:Origin of this legend (Score:2)
Thanks, me to :-)
Re:Gee. (Score:4, Insightful)
Almost every ecology teacher beats several key things into your heads.
1. Survival of the fittest
in other words an individual does not do something for the benifit of the species, mainly due to the fact that doing so diverts energy that could be used to producing more young so that their genes survive. The individual will do things to benifit their genes, but not for unrelated individuals of the same species. Social species do have some altruistic behaviours, but their communities are generally made up of individuals that are related. However these altruistic behaviors do not include suicide.
2. The lynx and Hare.
Classic example of what is going on with the lemmings here. As the hare population increases there is more food for the lynx, thus more offspring are produced. As the lynx population increases there are fewer hare to eat and the lynx population declines, and so on.
So this study on lemmings is not surprising, actually I'm quite shocked that someone didn't figure it out sooner.
Re:Gee. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:University of Finland? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:University of Finland? (Score:1)
If you read the post once more you may notice that little detail that states:
Universities of Finland. And I'm sure that Finland have several universities.
Re:University of Finland? (Score:2)
Hmm. Implying that all the universities in Finland participated? That seems pretty unlikely.
In fact Finland does have many universities. A great many when you consider it only has about 5 million people.
Busy little lemmings (Score:1)
Yes, Finland is practically swarming with academics.
I'm afraid you're mistaken (Score:3, Informative)
I'm afraid you misread that. The post says "Universities of Finland and Freiburg (Germany)", while the ABC article says "University of Finland, and Benoit Sittler of the University of Freiburg in Germany."
The university in question is the University of Helsinki, Finland. (I have university access to the Science articles.)
You're right. (Score:2)
From Science (My university subscribes):
Olivier Gilg,1,2* Ilkka Hanski,1 Benoit Sittler3
1 Department of Ecology and Systematics, Division of Population Biology, Post Office Box 65, 00014 University of Helsinki, Finland.
2 CBGP, Campus de Baillarguet, Equipe Biologie et Gestion des Pullulations (INRA-IRD), CS 30016, 34988 Montferrier/Lez Cedex, France.
3 Institut fur Landespflege, University of Freiburg, 79085 Freiburg, Germany.
* To whom correspondence should be addressed
Pingus (Score:2, Funny)
If the Lemmings were running Linux
Then they'd be Pingus [seul.org]