Agent-based modelling of clonal plant propagation across space: Recapturing fairy rings, power laws and other phenomena
Authored by Chris T Bauch, Madhur Anand, Sanders Wong
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecoinf.2010.11.004
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Many plants reproduce clonally through vegetative extensions (spacers).
This results in a patch of clones connected through a network of
spacers. The resulting network has a nontrivial spatial pattern that can
be an important determinant of survival and fitness of the clonal plant.
Here, we develop general growth rules that dictate how individual clones
under local density-dependent conditions add spacers, giving rise to
emergent population-level spatial patterns. A population subject to
these growth rules is simulated using a stochastic individual-based
model. The dependence of network structure on various architectural
parameters is explored. The growth rules generate networks similar to
those observed in natural populations, and can replicate real-world
phenomena such as central die-back with regeneration, `fairy rings', and
branch entrapment. A shorter spacer length results in higher population
density (which may confer resistance to invasion in real populations), while longer spacer length allows the population to spread more quickly.
The lateral branching angle, node-by-node angle, and spacer length
appear to be the most influential parameters for determining the spatial
architecture of the clonal patch. The number of daughter branches per
mother branch follows a power law distribution in a diverse set of
simulated networks. Continually growing computational power will make
such simulation models increasingly useful for understanding the spatial
growth of clonal plants, and power law behaviour may be a very common
feature of both simulated and real clonal plant populations. (C) 2010
Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
morphology
stochastic simulation
architecture
growth
Organization
Solidago-altissima
Branching patterns
Medeola-virginiana
Vegetative spread
Sedge