A novel modeling approach for the "end-to-end" analysis of marine ecosystems
Authored by Candelaria E Sansores, Flavio Reyes-Ramirez, Luis E Calderon-Aguilera, Hector F Gomez
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoinf.2016.01.001
Sponsors:
Mexican Ministry of Education
Platforms:
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Model Documentation:
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Abstract
There is a growing demand for ``end-to-end{''} models, which are
modeling tools used to analyze and understand the fundamental
complexities of marine ecosystems and processes emerging from the
interaction of individuals from different trophic groups with respect to
the physical environment and, even, human activity. These models are
valuable quantitative tools for ecosystem-based management. To explore
potential answers to complex questions regarding ecosystems using these
models, it is necessary to incorporate classical ontogenic changes
through the life cycle of target individuals, in addition to inherited
behavioral strategies, as an additional differentiating aspect, particularly when the behavior has a direct impact on the ecosystem
phenomena under study. However, it is difficult to combine different
fine scale time and spatial granularities to infer animal behavior and
ontogenic development. This complexity has kept these two levels of
analysis separated, because most current tools do not have the required
computational resources and advanced software architecture. To address
this issue, we propose an individual-based modeling framework that is
capable of handling and unifying the two experimental categories with a
comprehensive biological and behavioral model that strictly adheres to
the physiological functions of ingestion, growth, and metabolism of
organisms. In addition, this model incorporates the exchange and
transfer of mass and energy through local interactions at all trophic
levels (lower to higher), the physical environment, and anthropogenic
activity. For the framework to model short time events, such as
classical predator-prey interactions, while also generating long-term
ecosystem emergent properties, a special interleaving scheduling engine
and physical space computer model was devised, which optimizes memory
and processing resources. The framework was tested through several
experiments with a three-population ecosystem containing up to 40
thousand organisms evolving inside a 200,000 m(2) simulation environment
during 12,000 model-hours; yet, requiring only a few hours of program
execution on a regular personal computer. The model included various
environmental physical elements, such as several hundred shelters, the
number of which can be easily modified in each experiment to simulate
substrate degradation and its impact on populations. With the aid of the
quantitative and qualitative tools provided by the model, it was
possible to observe a coupling between prey and predator population
dynamics. In conclusion, we confirmed that the end-to-end model
developed here could successfully generate detailed specific hypotheses
about fish behavior and quantify impacts on population dynamics. (C)
2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Individual-based model
Dynamics
Simulations
growth
Populations
Size
Trophic interactions
Ecological theory
Lake fish communities