Oscillatory dynamics and spatial scale: The role of noise and unresolved pattern
                Authored by Simon A Levin, M Pascual, P Mazzega
                
                    Date Published: 2001
                
                
                    DOI: 10.1890/0012-9658(2001)082[2357:odasst]2.0.co;2
                
                
                    Sponsors:
                    
                        Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
                        
                        United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
                        
                
                
                    Platforms:
                    
                        No platforms listed
                    
                
                
                    Model Documentation:
                    
                        Other Narrative
                        
                        Mathematical description
                        
                
                
                    Model Code URLs:
                    
                        Model code not found
                    
                
                Abstract
                Predator-prey and other nonlinear ecological interactions often lead to
oscillatory dynamics in temporal systems and in spatial systems when the
rates of movement are large, so that individuals are effectively well
mixed and space becomes unimportant. When individuals are not well
mixed, however. properties of fluctuations in population densities, and
in particular their amplitudes. are known to vary with the spatial scale
at which the system is observed. We investigate the relationship among
dynamics at different spatial scales with an individual-based
predator-prey model that is stochastic and nonlinear. Results elucidate
the role of spatial pattern and individual variability in the dynamics
of densities. We show that spatial patterns in this system reduce the
per capita rates of predation and prey growth but preserve functional
forms. The functional forms remain those one would expect in a
well-mixed system in which individuals interact according to mean
population densities, but with modified parameters. This similarity of
the functional forms allows us to approximate accurately the long-term
dynamics of the spatial system at large scales with a temporal
predator-prey model with only two variables, a simple system of ordinary
differential equations of the type ecologists have been using for a long
time. This approximation provides an explanation for the stabilizing
role of space. the decrease in the amplitude of fluctuations from the
well-mixed to the limited-movement case.
We also provide an explanation for the previously described aperiodic
dynamics of densities at intermediate spatial scales. These irregular
cycles result from the interplay of demographic noise with decaying
oscillations, where the decay of the cycles is due to the spatial
patterns. It is indeed possible to capture essential properties of these
cycles. including their apparent sensitivity to initial conditions, with
a model that follows individuals but parameterizes their spatial
interactions in a simple way, using again the similarity of functional
forms and the modified parameters. Thus, demographic noise appears
essential at a spatial scale previously chosen for the high degree of
determinism in the dynamics.
Our results illustrate a semi-empirical approach to simplify and to
scale spatial ecological systems that are oscillatory from individual or
local-scale to large-scale dynamics.
                
Tags
                
                    time-series
                
                    models
                
                    ecology
                
                    Dispersal
                
                    systems
                
                    stability
                
                    Population-dynamics
                
                    Predator-prey interactions
                
                    Intermediate-scale
                
                    Determinism