Effects of dispersal and stochasticity on the presence-absence of multiple species
Authored by Michael J Plank, Mohd Hafiz Mohd, Rua Murray, William Godsoe
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2016.09.026
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Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
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Mathematical description
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Abstract
A key problem in ecology is to predict the presence absence of species
across a geographical region. Dispersal is thought to have an important
influence on the range limits of species, and understanding this problem
in a multi-species community with priority effects (i.e. initial
abundances determine the presence absence of species) is a challenging
task because dispersal interacts with biotic and abiotic factors as well
as demographic stochasticity. By using stochastic individual-based
models (IBM) and deterministic models consisting of biotic interactions
and environmental gradients, we investigate the joint effects of
dispersal and stochasticity on the occurrence of priority effects that
can shape the presence absence of multiple species. Our analysis shows
the conditions under which priority effects occur and disappear as
dispersal intensity changes. Without dispersal, priority effects emerge
in the presence of intense biotic interactions; only one species
surviving at any given location, with no overlap in their ranges.
Inclusion of dispersal first reduces the prevalence of priority effects
(i.e. for weak dispersal), and then leads to their increase (i.e. for
moderate dispersal); consequently, dispersal enhances the possibility
for species ranges to overlap. Increasing dispersal strength above a
threshold value leads to the disappearance of priority effects and
causes extinction of some species. We also demonstrate contrasting
observations of stochasticity on priority effects: while this phenomenon
is more prevalent in the stochastic IBM than in the deterministic models
for large populations, we observe fewer occurrences of priority effects
in IBM for small populations; in particular, our IBM results show that
priority effects are eliminated by weaker values of dispersal when
population sizes are small than when they are large. This situation can
induce an uncertainty in the predictions of species presence absence.
Overall, our results demonstrate how the interplay of dispersal and
stochasticity can combine to result in the (dis-)appearance of priority
effects that strongly determine the presence absence of species. (C)
2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Competition
Spatial heterogeneity
models
Dynamics
Distributions
Climate-change
Community structure
Biotic interactions
Seed
dispersal
Range limits