The effect of functional response on stability of a grazer population on a landscape
Authored by Donald L DeAngelis, A Basset, JE Diffendorfer
Date Published: 1997
DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3800(97)01975-3
Sponsors:
National Biological Service
University of Miami
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No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The dynamics of interacting consumer and resource populations is one of
the most thoroughly studied problems of theoretical population biology.
Among the key results from the study of simple mathematical models of
interacting populations is that the Holling Type 2 functional response
tends to be unstable for a wide range of realistic parameters.
Functional responses such as Holling Type 3, which might be thought of
as implicitly incorporating the existence of consumer refuges, are more
stable than the Type 2. We studied consumer-resource models with these
different functional responses on a landscape level by modeling grazers
that can disperse across a space of patchily distributed grass
resources. For certain assumptions concerning the movement of grazers on
the landscape, the effect of these functional responses on stability is
reversed; the Holling Type 2 functional response confers greater
stability. The reason for this apparently paradoxical result is that the
Holling Type 2 functional response allows grazers to graze individual
grass patches to lower levels than Type 3, as the energy balance remains
favorable for grazing at lower grass biomasses. However, this local
overexploitation leads the grazers to be slower in reaching areas of the
landscape where resource densities are higher. It decreases the
likelihood that the resource will be overexploited over the whole
landscape simultaneously, which results in a stronger tendency towards
system stability. It appears, then, that consumer overexploitation of
resources locally may contribute to lower stability. (C) 1997 Elsevier
Science B.V.
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