BAT POPULATION DYNAMICS: MULTILEVEL MODEL BASED ON INDIVIDUALS' ENERGETICS
Authored by Paula Federico, Dobromir T Dimitrov, Gary F McCracken
Date Published: 2008
DOI: 10.3934/mbe.2008.5.743
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Abstract
Temperature-zone bats are subject to serious energetic constraints due
to their high surface area to volume relations, the cost of temperature
regulation, the high metabolic cost of flight, and the seasonality of
their resources. We present a novel, multilevel theoretical approach
that integrates information on bat biology collected at a lower level of
organization, the individual with its physiological characteristics, into a modeling framework at a higher level, the population. Our
individual component describes the growth of an individual female bat by
modeling the dynamics of the main body compartments (lipids, proteins, and carbohydrates). A structured population model based on extended
McKendrick-von Foerster partial differential equations integrates those
individual dynamics and provides insight into possible regulatory
mechanisms of population size as well as conditions of population
survival and extinction. Though parameterized for a specific bat
species, all modeling components can be modified to investigate other
bats with similar life histories. A better understanding of population
dynamics in bats can assist in the development of management techniques
and conservation strategies, and to investigate stress effects. Studying
population dynamics of bats presents particular challenges, but bats are
essential in some areas of concern in conservation and disease ecology
that demand immediate investigation.
Tags
Virus
Environments
Reservoir
Myotis-lucifugus