Evolution and spatial structure interact to influence plant-herbivore population and community dynamics
Authored by Simon A Levin, G Hartvigsen
Date Published: 1997
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
Andrew Mellon Foundation
Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education
Platforms:
C
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
An individual-based model of plant-herbivore interactions was developed
to test the potentially interactive effects of explicit space and
coevolution on population and community dynamics. Individual plants and
herbivores resided in cells on a lattice and carried linked interaction
genes. Interaction strength between individual plants and herbivores
depended on concordance between these genes (gene-for-gene coevolution).
Mating and dispersal among individuals were controlled spatially within
variably sized neighbourhoods.
Without evolution we observed high-frequency plant-herbivore
oscillations (blue spectral with small individual neighbourhoods, and
stochastic fluctuations (white spectral with large neighbourhoods.
Evolution resulted in decreased interaction strength, decreased
herbivore-induced plant mortality, increased population sizes, and
longer-term fluctuations (reddened spectral. Small herbivore
neighbourhoods led to herbivore extinction only with evolution.
To explore the increased population size response to evolution we ran
simulations without evolution while tuning plant-herbivore interaction
strength from high to none. We found that herbivore populations were
maximized at intermediate levels of interaction strength that coincided
with the interaction strength achieved when the system tuned itself
through evolution.
Overall, our model shows that the small-scale details of phenotypically
variable individual-level interactions, leading to evolutionary
dynamics, affect large-scale population and community dynamics.
Tags
models
Coevolution