Dose-structured population dynamics
Authored by Timothy R Ginn, Frank J Loge
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.mbs.2006.12.003
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Applied population dynamics modeling is relied upon with increasing
frequency to quantify how human activities affect human and non-human
populations. Current techniques include variously the population's
spatial transport, age, size, and physiology, but typically not the
life-histories of exposure to other important things occurring in the
ambient environment, such as chemicals, heat, or radiation.
Consequently, the effects of such `abiotic' aspects of an ecosystem on
populations are only currently addressed through individual-based
modeling approaches that despite broad utility are limited in their
applicability to realistic ecosystems {[}V. Grimm, Ten years of
individual-based modeling in ecology: what have we learned and what
could we learn in the future? Ecol. Model. 115 (1999) 129-148]{[}1]. We
describe a new category of population dynamics modeling, wherein
population dynamical states of the biotic phases are structured on dose, and apply this framework to demonstrate how chemical species or other
ambient aspects can be included in population dynamics in three separate
examples involving growth suppression in fish, inactivation of
microorganisms with ultraviolet irradiation, and metabolic lag in
population growth. Dose-structuring is based on a kinematic approach
that is a simple generalization of age-structuring, views the ecosystem
as a multicomponent mixture with reacting biotic/abiotic components. The
resulting model framework accommodates (a) different memories of
exposure as in recovery from toxic ambient conditions, (b)
differentiation between exogenous and endogenous sources of variation in
population response, and (c) quantification of acute or sub-acute
effects on populations arising from life-history exposures to abiotic
species. Classical models do not easily address the very important fact
that organisms differ and have different experiences over their life
cycle. The dose structuring is one approach to incorporate some of these
elements into the existing structures of the classical models, while
retaining many of the features (and other limitations) of classical
models. (C) 2007 Published by Elsevier Inc.
Tags
Performance
models
Heterogeneity
Distributions
Reproduction
Flow
Formulation
Stochastic-convective transport
Uv disinfection
Exposure-time