Predicting global dynamics from local interactions: individual-based models predict complex features of marine epibenthic communities
Authored by PK Dunstan, CR Johnson
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2005.01.016
Sponsors:
Australian Research Council (ARC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Spatially explicit community models often generate a wide range of
complex dynamics and behaviours, but the predictions of community
structure and dynamics from many of these models are rarely compared
with the natural communities they are intended to represent. Here, we
develop a spatially explicit individual-based model of a complex marine
epibenthic community and test its ability to predict the dynamics and
structure of the natural community on which the model is based. We
studied a natural epibenthic community on small-scale patches of jetty
wall to estimate the outcomes of pair-wise interactions among
individuals of different species, neighbour-specific growth rates, and
species-specific recruitment and mortality rates. The model is defined
with rules acting at two spatial scales: (1) between individual cells on
the spatial landscape that define the nature of interactions, growth and
recruitment at a scale of 1 cm(2), and (2) at the scale of whole
colonies (blocks of contiguous cells) that define size-specific
mortality and limitations to the maximum size of colonies for some
species for scales up to 1000 cm(2). The model is compared to the
existing patches on the jetty wall and proves to be a good descriptor of
the large range of possible communities on the jetty, and of the
multivariate variances of the patches. The high variability in community
structure predicted by the model, which is similar to that observed in
the natural community, arises from observed variability in parameters of
interaction outcomes, growth, recruitment, and mortality of each
species. Thus if the processes we modelled operate similarly in nature, our results suggest that it is difficult to attempt to predict the
precise trajectory of the community in a particular patch. Our results
show that it is possible to develop a testable, predictive spatial model
where the patch-scale community patterns of structure and dynamics are
emergent, arising from local processes between colonies and
species-specific demography. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Simulation
selection
environment
Mortality
Spatial structure
Recruitment
Interspecific competition
Invertebrates
Overgrowth competition
Bryozoan