Use of an individual-based model to forecast the effect of climate change on the dynamics, abundance and geographical range of the pest slug Deroceras reticulatum in the UK
Authored by Mikhail A Semenov, David A Bohan, Jenna C Willis, Yoon H Choi, Kelvin F Conrad
Date Published: 2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2486.2006.01201.x
Sponsors:
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Slugs are serious agricultural pests and their activity is strongly
driven by ambient temperature and soil moisture. The strength of this
relationship has been shown through the development of a deterministic
model, based upon temperature and soil moisture conditions alone, which
accurately describes the population dynamics and abundance of Deroceras
reticulatum. Because of this strong climatic dependence, slug abundance
and dynamics are likely to be affected by climate change. We used a
validated individual-based model ( IbM) of D. reticulatum, to assess the
effects of climate change on the abundance of this species in the UK.
Climatic scenarios were based on the UKCIP02 predictions and constructed
using the LARS-WG stochastic weather generator. The IbM of slugs
predicted population dynamics at three time slices (2020s, 2050s and
2080s), and two scenarios of greenhouse gas emissions. The maximum
generation number, the number of population peaks, the number of
slug-days in each season, the percentage of years when the population
passes over a threshold for damage and the percentage of years in which
populations go extinct were investigated. Currently, the south-west of
the UK has the best conditions for D. reticulatum to thrive, with the
north-east of Scotland having the most adverse. By 2080 under both low-
and high-emissions scenarios, the north and west of Scotland will have
the most favourable conditions for the survival of this species and the
east of the UK and Scotland will have the harshest. By 2080 the climate
in the north-west of Scotland will become more like the current climate
in southeast England, which explains the shift in the pattern of
abundance. The north-west of Scotland will have increased slug damage
and south-west England and west-Wales will have decreased slug damage
with some changes becoming evident by 2020.
Tags
Spatial dynamics
Population-dynamics
Temperature
Biology
Britain
Stochastic weather generators
Change scenarios
Lars-wg