Modeling individual and population dynamics in a consumer-resource system: Behavior under food limitation and crowding and the effect on population cycling in Daphnia
Authored by Joost Vanoverbeke
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2008.05.009
Sponsors:
European Science Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
In population modeling, a considerable level of complexity is often
required to provide trustworthy results, comparable with field
observations. By assuring sufficient detail at the individual level
while preserving the potential to explore the consequences at higher
levels, individual-based modeling may thus provide a useful tool to
investigate dynamics at different levels of organization. Still, population dynamics resulting from such models are often at odds with
observations from the field. This may be partly caused by a lack of
focus on the individual dynamics under conditions of food stress and
starvation. I developed a physiologically structured, individual-based
simulation model to investigate life history of Daphnia and its effect
on population dynamics in response to the productivity of the system. in
verifying model behavior with available literature data on life history
and physiology, I paid special attention to the dynamics of food intake
and the verification of individual level results underconditions of food
limitation and starvation. I show that the maximum filtering rates under
low food levels used in the current model are much closer to measured
filtering rates than the ones used in other models. Being consistent
with results on physiology and life history from experiments at a wide
range of food availability (including starvation), the model generates
low amplitude or high amplitude population density cycles depending on
the productivity of the system, as observed in field and experimental
populations of Daphnia and with the minimum population densities being
one to two orders of magnitude lower in the high amplitude than in the
low amplitude cycles. To generate results which are not only
qualitatively but also quantitatively comparable to experimental and
field observations, however, a crowding effect on the filtering response
has to be incorporated in the model. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights
reserved.
Tags
phenotypic plasticity
Life-history
Physiological ecology
Energy budget models
Magna straus
Respiration rates
Allocation rules
Body size
Maturation threshold
Filtering rates