MODELING GLOBAL MACROCLIMATIC CONSTRAINTS ON ECTOTHERM ENERGY BUDGETS
Authored by WP PORTER, BW GRANT
Date Published: 1992
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
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Abstract
We describe a mechanistic individual-based model of how global
macroclimatic constraints affect the energy budgets of ectothermic
animals. The model uses macroclimatic and biophysical characters of the
habitat and organism and tenets of heat transfer theory to calculate
hourly temperature availabilities over a year. Data on the temperature
dependence of activity rate, metabolism, food consumption and food
processing capacity are used to estimate the net rate of resource
assimilation which is then integrated over time. We detail and explore
the significance of assumptions used in these calculations.
We present a new test of this model in which we show that the predicted
energy budget sizes for 11 populations of the lizard Sceloporus
undulatus are in close agreement with observed results from previous
field studies. This demonstrates that model tests are feasible and the
results are reasonable. Further, since the model represents an upper
bound to the size of the energy budget, observed residual deviations
form explicit predictions about the effects of environmental constraints
on the bioenergetics of the study lizards within each site that may be
tested by future field and laboratory studies.
Three major new improvements to our modeling are discussed. We present a
means to estimate microclimate thermal heterogeneity more realistically
and include its effects on field rates of individual activity and food
consumption. Second, we describe an improved model of digestive function
involving batch processing of consumed food. Third, we show how
optimality methods (specifically the methods of stochastic dynamic
programming) may be included to model the fitness consequences of energy
allocation decisions subject to food consumption and processing
constraints which are predicted from the microclimate and physiological
modeling.
Individual-based models that incorporate macroclimatic constraints on
individual resource acquisition, assimilation and allocation can provide
insights into theoretical investigations about the evolution of life
histories in variable environments as well as provide explicit
predictions about individual, population and community level responses
to global climate change.
Tags
phenotypic plasticity
site selection
Life-history traits
Uta-stansburiana
Home range size
Lizard sceloporus-merriami
Body-temperature
Tropical mainland
anole
Food
supplementation
Norops-humilis