STUNTED GROWTH AND STEPWISE DIE-OFF IN ANIMAL COHORTS
Authored by Donald L DeAngelis, Marten Scheffer, EHRR Lammens, JM Baveco, B SHUTER
Date Published: 1995
DOI: 10.1086/285745
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI)
Martin Marietta Systems Inc
Platforms:
GRIND
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A model of an animal cohort foraging on logistically growing food is
analyzed. The problem is captured in three differential equations, one
for food density and two for the state of the animal cohort, keeping
track of body weight and number of individuals, respectively. When the
animals efficiently exploit their food to low densities, the model
produces cycles. The cycles differ markedly from those produced by
traditional predator-prey models. Consumer decline is associated with
starvation mortality when individuals lose too much weight. This
condition causes a stepwise decline in individual number, each step
corresponding to one cycle. Because the survivors of each starvation
period grow and because larger animals have lower weight-specific
metabolic rates, the nature of the cycles changes over time. They
acquire a slow-fast character because of the increasing difference
between food and consumer speed and show distinct catastrophic features, as the fast phases are caused by jumping between an over- and
underexploited state of the food population, The cycles may either
continue toward extinction of the cohort or damp out in a stable state
characterized by stunted individual growth. Data from fish communities
are closely in line with the specific predictions from this generic
model about patterns of die-off and stunted growth. The model behavior
is robust. It does not depend on the type of functional response or the
way in which mortality increases with individual loss. Furthermore, the
same patterns are obtained from an elaborate, realistic individual-based
model, which indicates that the results are not artifacts of
simplifications like considering all individuals equal and assuming only
one food source.
Tags
ecology
systems
Prey
stability
Survival
Population regulation
Young migratory trout
Salmo-trutta