Ideal free distribution of Daphnia under predation risk-model predictions and experimental verification
Authored by Janusz Uchmanski, Piotr Maszczyk, Ewa Babkiewicz, Marta Czarnocka-Cieciura, Z Maciej Gliwicz, Paulina Urban
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1093/plankt/fby024
Sponsors:
National Science Centre
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The vertical distribution of planktonic animals, such as Daphnia, in
overlapping gradients of food concentration and risk of visual predation
should depend on Daphnia population density and should be the result of
the group effect of optimizing decisions taken by each individual
(juvenile or adult), trading-off a high growth rate to low mortality
risk. We tested this hypothesis by comparing the theoretical
distributions from simulations based on an experimentally parameterized,
optimizing individual-based model (consistent with the assumptions of
the concept of the interference ideal free distribution with costs) with
distributions observed in laboratory experiments. The simulations were
generated for two scenarios, where the shape of the functional response
of fish is consistent with either type II or III. The results confirmed
the hypothesis. The greatest similarity of the distributions obtained in
the experiments and simulations was found for the simulations based on
the scenario assuming the type III rather than type II for both age
classes of Daphnia. This was consistent with the results of the
experiments for the model parameterization, which revealed the type III
functional response of fish. Therefore, the results suggest that
aggregating may be maladaptive as an anti-vertebrate-predation defense
in the case of zooplankton.
Tags
Predation risk
ideal free distribution
zooplankton
Trade-off
Prey
fitness
Food
Functional-response
Habitat selection
Light-intensity
Diel vertical migration
Planktivorous fish
Daphnia
Sticklebacks gasterosteus-aculeatus
Planktonic prey
Energetic equivalence
Functional response
Diurnal vertical migration
Planktivorous
fish
Stream fish
Energetic
equivalence