An individual based model of the impact of suboptimal habitat on survival of the grey bush cricket, Platycleis albopunctata (Orthoptera: Tettigoniidae)
Authored by Eva M Griebeler, Eckhard Gottschalk
Date Published: 2000
DOI: 10.1023/a:1011343609779
Sponsors:
German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We developed an individual based model that investigates the importance
of suboptimal habitats for the survival of the grey bush cricket
Platycleis albopunctata living in a core habitat. Our model consists of
two submodels. The first describes the demographic growth of the cricket
known to mainly depend on temperature. The second introduces a simple
heterogeneous habitat that consists of two areas of variable size and
different suitability for reproduction. An optimal habitat is surrounded
by a suboptimal habitat and both together are located within an
unsuitable area. Applying Monte Carlo simulations we demonstrate that
the extinction probability of a bush cricket population is significantly
lower in an optimal habitat with a surrounding suboptimal habitat than
without. Even small suboptimal habitats are sufficient to significantly
reduce the extinction risk of the core population. For a bush cricket
population living in a heterogeneous habitat mean minimum viable
population estimates range from 13 000 to 15 000 adults, whereas 30 000
adults are required for a population living in an optimal habitat
without a surrounding suboptimal habitat. Thus, the presence of a
suboptimal habitat can reduce minimum viable population by 50\%. For any
species, our model predicts that the type of dispersal between optimal
and suboptimal habitat and the type of habitat selection determine
whether suboptimal habitat is useful or detrimental for species
persistence.
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