Simulation of insect movement with respect to plant architecture and morphogenesis
Authored by J Hanan, P Prusinkiewicz, M Zalucki, D Skirvin
Date Published: 2002
DOI: 10.1016/s0168-1699(02)00022-4
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Abstract
Developments in computer and three dimensional (3D) digitiser
technologies have made it possible to keep track of the broad range of
data required to simulate an insect moving around or over the highly
heterogeneous habitat of a plant's surface. Properties of plant parts
vary within a complex canopy architecture, and insect damage can induce
further changes that affect an animal's movements, development and
likelihood of survival. Models of plant architectural development based
on Lindenmayer systems (L-systems) serve as dynamic platforms for
simulation of insect movement, providing ail explicit model of the
developing 3D structure of a plant as well as allowing physiological
processes associated with plant growth and responses to damage to be
described and Simulated. Simple examples of the use of the L-system
formalism to model insect movement, operating Lit different spatial
scales-from insects foraging on an individual plant to insects flying
around plants in a field-are presented. Such models can be used to
explore questions about the consequences of changes in environmental
architecture and configuration on host finding, exploitation and its
population consequences. In effect this model is a `virtual ecosystem'
laboratory to address local as well as landscape-level questions
pertinent to plant-insect interactions, taking plant architecture into
account. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
patterns
Model
Lepidoptera
Herbivory