A theoretical examination of environmental effects on the life cycle schedule and range limits of the invasive seaweed Undaria pinnatifida
Authored by James T Murphy, Mark P Johnson, Frederique Viard
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-016-1357-1
Sponsors:
European Union
Irish Research Council
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/murphyjtm/undariaGEN
Abstract
Invasive macroalgae form a substantial component of marine invaders at a
global level. However, it is poorly understood how the complex
interactions between local environmental conditions and life cycle
dynamics contribute to invasion success from a mechanistic viewpoint.
The aim of this study was to use a model (UndariaGEN) that incorporates
a detailed representation of the individual heteromorphic life history
stages (sporophytes and gametophytes) of the species in order to explore
how interactions between these components contribute to the overall
population dynamics. The latest version of the model was validated
against field data from a real-life population in Brittany, France. This
was followed by an assessment of the role of temperature limitations in
determining its potential global range and then a more detailed
examination of how environmental factors affect the life cycle dynamics
of U. pinnatifida across a range of conditions characteristic of
European populations. In terms of both relative abundance and
recruitment, the model matches closely the patterns observed from field
studies in Brittany, France (R-2 = 0.98 respectively). Furthermore, the
model predicted theoretical temperature limits for growth (9.1-22.5 A
degrees C) match closely the actual current global range limits for the
species (9.5-22.4 A degrees C) reported in the literature. In addition, the size of the species' ecological niche is shown to be directly
related to the amplitude in seasonal variation of temperature. This
demonstrates that U. pinnatifida has a wider ecological niche in
conditions of high seasonality; this finding is consistent with theories
that propose the heteromorphic life cycle may have evolved as an optimal
growth strategy for highly seasonal environments.
Tags
Agent-based model
Individual-based model
Macroalgae
growth
Brown alga
Predict
Establishment
Laminariales
Species distribution
Sea
Lagoon-of-venice
Macroalgal introductions
Phaeophyta
Gametophytes
Seaweed
Life cycle schedule
Ecological niche