Exploitative competition and ecological effective abundance
Authored by M Kawata
Date Published: 1997
DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3800(96)00008-7
Sponsors:
Japanese Ministries
Platforms:
Pascal
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
This study analyzes the effect of exploitative competition and density
dependence by using an individual-based simulation model. There are two
components of exploitative competition (leftovers and resource-recovery
competition). In leftovers competition, individuals compete for food
resources that have been left by others. In resource-recovery
competition, the consumption of foods by individual predators affects
growth rates of food populations. An individual-based simulation was
conducted to examine how these two types of competition affect
density-dependent processes. In the simulation, individual predators
search for food organisms within their home range. Food organisms
reproduce in three different ways: replacement, recruitment and
neighborhood recruitment. In replacement all food organisms die and are
replaced with a new food population. In recruitment, food organisms do
not disappear during simulation unless they are eaten by predators, and
new food organisms are recruited based on their density, In neighborhood
recruitment, food organisms reproduce depending on their abundance
within the neighborhood area. The simulation was conducted by varying
the number of predators, the home range size of individual predators, the area of simulation, the reproductive rates of food organisms, and
the reproductive modes of the food organisms. The number of food
organisms taken by an individual predator, and the number of predators
over several different scales, were measured. A multiple regression was
conducted to examine the relationships between several different
estimations of predator abundance and the number of food organisms taken
by an predator. The effects of different types of exploitative
competition differed depending upon the spatial scale or estimated
population density. The number of predators within the home range of an
individual predator is negatively related to individual food gain. This
suggests that leftovers competition can be detected within the home
range of an individual predator. In the case in which the food
population was regulated over the whole simulation area, the number of
predators in the whole area was positively related to food gain of
individual predator in the case of recruitment and neighborhood
recruitment of reproduction of food, but positively in replacement. In
the case in which a food population was regulated in smaller parts of
the whole area, the estimated number of predators within a food
population were related to food gain of an individual predator but the
total population size does not affect the food gain. (C) 1997 Elsevier
Science B.V.
Tags
patterns
scale
Populations
Leaf
Detecting density dependence