Accounting for intrapopulation variability in biogeochemical models using agent-based methods
Authored by Ferdi L Hellweger, Ehsan Kianirad
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1021/es062046j
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Fortran
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/suppl/10.1021/es062046j
Abstract
Present biogeochemical models typically use a lumped-system
(population-level) modeling (LSM) approach that assumes average
properties of a population within a control volume. For modern models
that formulate phytoplankton growth as a nonlinear function of the
internal nutrient (e.g., Droop kinetics), this averaging assumption can
introduce a significant error. Agent-based (individual-based) modeling
(ABM) is an alternative approach that does not make the assumption of
average properties. This paper presents a new agent-based phytoplankton
model called iAlgae. The model is contrasted to a conventional
lumped-system model, constructed based on identical underlying
sub-models of nutrient uptake (including luxury uptake) and growth (cell
quota, Droop model). The two models are validated against laboratory
data and applied to a realistic scenario, consisting of a point source
nutrient discharge into a river. For the realistic scenario, the
ABM-predicted phytoplankton bloom is significantly lower than the
LSM-predicted one, which is due to the intrapopulation distribution in
cell quotas (due to different life histories of individuals) and
nonlinearity of the growth rate model. In the ABM, a fraction of the
population accumulates nutrients in excess of their immediate growth
requirement (luxury uptake), leaving less for the remainder. Because the
model is nonlinear, this results in a suboptimal (from a population
perspective) utilization of nutrient and a lower population-level growth
rate, compared to the case of no intrapopulation variability assumed by
the LSM model. In general, the ABM and LSM approaches can produce
significantly different results when incompletely mixed conditions lead
to intrapopulation variability in cell properties (i.e., cell quota) and
the model equations are nonlinear.
Tags
Complexity
Dynamics
kinetics
plankton
phosphorus
growth
Populations
Transport
Nutrient status
Algal cells