Onsager's relations and Ecology
Onsager's relations and Ecology
Choi, J. S.
AbstractThere are two complementary approaches to thermodynamics: an empirical, phenomenological representation of macroscopic states and a model-based, statistical-mechanical representation of microscopic states. If only a few energy transformation steps are involved, macroscopic quantities such as energy and entropy can be estimated without ambiguity, and often the associated microscopic states are well characterised. Both approaches have been used to develop and guide many key early ecological ideas. However, most ecosystems are characterized by uncountably many transformations that operate on a wide range of space and time scales. This renders the bounds of such systems become ambiguous making both the macroscopic and microscopic approaches a challenge. As such, the implementation of both approaches remain areas ripe for further investigation. In particular, the Onsager reciprocal relations permit simplification of expectations that are yet to be fully understood in an ecological context. Here we begin on taking a few first steps in trying understand the far-reaching ramifications of these thermodynamic relations.