Predicting extinction: Progress with an individual-based model of protozoan predators and prey
Authored by PH Crowley, M Holyoak, SP Lawler
Date Published: 2000
DOI: 10.1890/0012-9658(2000)081[3312:pepwai]2.0.co;2
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Despite the importance of understanding persistence, there are few
direct tests of the ability of models to predict predator and prey
population persistence. We tested whether an individual-based model
could forecast the dynamics and time to extinction in aquatic microcosms
of a protist predator and prey: predatory Didinium nasutum and
bacterivorous Colpidium striatum. By addressing both persistence and
dynamics, the model increases the testability of mechanisms of
extinction. Population-level equations modeled the functional response
and prey growth. For individual predators, we simulated time since
dividing and feeding, and number of prey consumed; these influenced the
timing of division and death. We tested the model by comparing simulated
dynamics to data from three experiments.: (1) an experiment initiated
with low predator-prey ratios in 30-mL bottles; (2) an experiment
similar to Experiment 1, but in which immigrant predators, prey, or both
were added during the first density cycle; (3) an experiment in 30-mL
bottles, initiated with various predator-prey ratios.
Using only nine parameters measured in independent experiments, simulations gave satisfactory predictions of the period and amplitude of
cycles of predator and prey densities, and predator and prey densities
through time for Experiment 1. Adding stochasticity to the model also
allowed it to reproduce observed prey and predator persistence and the
proportion of replicates with prey extinctions. We used the improved
model to forecast the results of Experiments 2 and 3. In Experiment 2, persistence changed with immigration. The model qualitatively reproduced
these changes but underestimated their magnitude. Increasing the initial
predator-prey ratio reduced persistence in Experiment 3. Simulations
failed to qualitatively reproduce these results for 30-mL microcosms, unless we raised initial prey density.
This study demonstrates the use of an individual-based model to help
identify and test mechanisms of extinction in predator-prey
interactions. The combination of individual-based and population-level
formalisms can maintain both model tractability and a close working
relationship between models and accessible data.
Tags
Dynamics
Conservation
ecology
spatial processes
Metapopulation structure
Structured population-models
Temporal variability
Butterfly melitaea-cinxia
Didinium-nasutum
Systems-analysis