Movement and egg laying in Monarchs: To move or not to move, that is the equation
Authored by M P Zalucki, J M Zalucki
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1111/aec.12285
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Repast
Java
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) populations are in decline in
agricultural landscapes, in which genetically modified crops that are
resistant to herbicides (Roundup Ready') have resulted in the decimation
of milkweed (Asclepias spp.) hosts over large areas due to the increased
use of glyphosate. Movement is the key ecological process linking
individual fitness traits to the utilization of sparse resources
distributed across landscapes with emergent population level
consequences. Often, movement ecology is highly simplified or even
abstracted into a simple rate of flow between populations (i.e. a
metapopulation) separated by a hostile matrix'. Whereas, we can gain
important insights into the population dynamic as a whole if we explore
movement as an explicit, complex, behavioural process in which the
matrix is not simply a void. We developed a spatially explicit
individual-based model to describe host-seeking behaviour over the
lifetime of a monarch butterfly, which utilizes hosts both aggregated in
patches and scattered across the wider landscape as a substrate for
laying eggs. We examine the simulated movement distances and spatial
population distribution (eggs laid) as a result of different movement
rules (directionality), perceptive distance (ability to find) and
landscape configuration (how milkweed is distributed). This indicates
the potential consequences of cleaning up the matrix (i.e. the
obliteration of non-crop vegetation with Roundup) and changing habitat
configurations at a landscape scale on individual movement behaviours
and the emergent number of eggs laid, essentially the birth term in any
population model. Our model generates movement distances of the order of
12km commensurate with summer breeding monarchs and suggests that
milkweed removal has reduced egg laying by up to 30\%. We suggest
possible amelioration strategies.
Tags
Dynamics
Landscape
Habitat fragmentation
population
patterns
Strategies
Dispersal behavior
Danaus-plexippus l
L lepidoptera
British
butterflies