Dr Athen Ma     BEng(Hons) PhD FHEA

Senior Lecturer

School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science

Email: athen.ma@qmul.ac.uk

Research news

NERC Pushing the frontiers grant 

Predicting the Impacts of Global Environmental Change on Ecological Networks

(NE/Y001184/1) starting March 2024 £840,297  


I am the joint Principal Investigator for this interdisciplinary project which combines network science with experimental ecology to better understand how ecosystems response to climate change.

Project Abstract: Global Environmental Change (GEC) is having profound effects on our natural environment, with declining biodiversity as a result of warming, acidification, and extreme climatic events such as heatwaves and droughts. Every species is part of a network of interactions that is integral to how ecosystems function and the loss of even one species can alter the population size of its consumers and resources, causing effects to ripple through the entire food web. The surviving species may also adapt by switching or expanding their diet in order to survive, resulting in complex reassembly of interactions. Thus, a deeper understanding of ecological network patterns will greatly enhance our ability to gauge how ecosystems will respond to GEC and help guide conservation efforts. Existing ecological assessment of GEC primarily focuses on the population-level response of a few key species, or coarse network-level metrics such as connectance, but little is known about network organisation at finer scales. For example, sub-network structures can include a cohesive 'core' of closely interacting nodes and a loosely connected 'periphery'. These sub-structures have been observed in many different types of artificial network (e.g. telecommunications and social networks), and their significance for governing dynamics and stability is widely acknowledged. In ecology, sub-network structures have revealed important fine scale changes in food webs exposed to drought, but this line of research is largely unexplored. Hence, there is an urgent need for scientific advances to facilitate the coupling between network theory and ecosystem ecology, allowing us to better understand how our natural systems withstand and adapt to the effects of external stressors. 

The overall aim of this project is to gauge and forecast the impact of GEC on ecological networks, and develop a more integrated modelling approach that can ultimately be expanded and adapted to cover all ecosystems. We will identify sub-network structures that provide resilience against GEC by profiling a database of 600 high-quality ecological networks from a wide range of climatic conditions across the globe, and conducting controlled experiments in semi-natural environments. Understanding how the sub-structural patterns have been altered in these networks will provide a new avenue for categorising the type and magnitude of ecosystem responses to GEC. In addition, we are typically limited to information about the state of an ecosystem before and after a climatic disturbance, with little known about the intermediate stages. The order of biodiversity loss can affect the way in which the surviving species adjust their diet, due to the availability of resource species at different stages. Thus, we will use computational models to simulate realistic orders of biodiversity loss, validated and refined using our manipulative experiments, helping us to identify the rules and mechanisms that underpin ecosystem responses to GEC. These findings will provide vital information for protecting our natural resources and enable scientists to predict the future health of ecosystems more accurately.


Research interests

My research transcends traditional disciplinary boundaries and develops innovative analytics to examine the structure and dynamics of ecosystems across different domains (e.g. [1,2]). I have developed novel analytics that revealed the assembly principles which underpin the organisation of collaborative science in the UK over the past three decades ([3]; featured in PNAS issue highlight [4] and commentary [5], Physics World [6] and Phys.org [7]). My experience in profiling large-scale networks enables me to perform robust analysis and modelling, tailored to undertaking important questions in ecology. I have a strong interest on the community organisation in ecological systems, and have developed multi-disciplinary techniques that uncovered how components of ecological networks rewired under drought ([8], formed the front cover of Nature Climate Change [9]) and how community structures in streams across the UK recovered from acidification [10]. My recent publication in Nature Ecology and Evolution has revealed that agricultural ecosystems from farm sites across the UK are remarkably resilient to genetically modified, herbicide tolerant management [11]. My multi-disciplinary approach to better understand networked ecosystems has been recognised as key to ecoinformatics and ecological big data research [12] as it provides a platform to explore complex ecological systems and interlink the services (e.g. production of food) they bring [13]. 


[1] Ma et al., Physica A 391, (2012)                                                    

[2] Ma et al., PLoS ONE 10, (2015) 

[3] Ma et al., PNAS 112, 14760 (2015) 

[4] http://www.pnas.org/content/112/48/14741.full.pdf. 

[5] http://www.pnas.org/content/112/48/14749. 

[6] http://physicsworld.com/cws/article/news/2015/oct/30/leading-universities-form-funding-clique.  

[7] http://phys.org/news/2015-11-landscape-funding.html.  

[8] Lu et al., Nat. Clim. Chang. 6, 875 (2016) 

[9] https://www.nature.com/nclimate/volumes/6/issues/9.  

[10] Gray et al., Adv. Ecol. Res. 55, 475 (2016) 

[11] Ma et al., Nat. Ecol. Evol. 3, 260 (2019)

[12] Ma et al., Adv. Ecol. Res. 59, 225 (2018)

[13] The Quintessence Consortium, Trends Ecol. Evol. 31, 105 (2016)



Selected publications

Ma A,  Lu X, Gray C, Raybould A, Tamaddoni-Nezhad A, Woodward G, Bohan DA. 

Ecological networks reveal resilience of agro-ecosystems to changes in farming management.  

Nature Ecology & Evolution 3:260–264 (2019) IF=19.1

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-018-0757-2 


*Lu X, Lu X, Gray C, Brown LE, Ledger ME, Milner AM, Mondragon RJ, Woodward G, Ma A 

Drought rewires the cores of food webs. 

Nature Climate Change 6:875-878 (2016). IF=28.8

https://doi.org/10.1038/nclimate3002 


Ma A, Mondragon RJ & Latora V

Anatomy of funded research in science. 

PNAS 112:14760–14765 (2015). IF=11.1

https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1513651112 


* as the corresponding author

IF = Impact Factor

Sub-structural properties revealed the degree of compensatory reshuffling within the food webs in response to climatic disturbance, and this self-organisation conserved the overall network stability.

Lu et al NCC (2016)


Grants

NERC Pushing the frontiers grant (NE/Y001184/1) £840,297 

Predicting the Impacts of Global Environmental Change on Ecological Networks

Principal investigators: Dr Athen Ma (QMUL) and Dr Eoin O'Gorman (Essex)

Co-investigators: Dr Pavel Kratina (QMUL) and Prof. Vito Latora (QMUL)

EU SUNSET: Sustainable Social Network Services for Transport £337,527

Principal investigator: Dr Stefan Poslad and co-investigator: Dr Athen Ma (QMUL)

ImpactQM Knowledge Transfer £10,000

Principal investigator: Dr Athen Ma (QMUL)

Macao Polytechnic Institute and Queen Mary University of London Joint Information Systems Research Centre >£I million

QMUL leads: Prof. Laurie Cuthbert and Dr Athen Ma