Panmictic and Clonal Evolution on a Single Patchy Resource Produces Polymorphic Foraging Guilds
Authored by Wayne M Getz, Richard Salter, Andrew J Lyons, Nicolas Sippl-Swezey
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0133732
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Nova
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Pseudocode
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/asset?unique&id=info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0133732.s005
Abstract
We develop a stochastic, agent-based model to study how genetic traits
and experiential changes in the state of agents and available resources
influence individuals' foraging and movement behaviors. These behaviors
are manifest as decisions on when to stay and exploit a current resource
patch or move to a particular neighboring patch, based on information of
the resource qualities of the patches and the anticipated level of
intraspecific competition within patches. We use a genetic algorithm
approach and an individual's biomass as a fitness surrogate to explore
the foraging strategy diversity of evolving guilds under clonal versus
hermaphroditic sexual reproduction. We first present the resource
exploitation processes, movement on cellular arrays, and genetic
algorithm components of the model. We then discuss their implementation
on the Nova software platform. This platform seamlessly combines the
dynamical systems modeling of consumer-resource interactions with
agent-based modeling of individuals moving over a landscapes, using an
architecture that lays transparent the following four hierarchical
simulation levels: 1.) within-patch consumer-resource dynamics, 2.)
within-generation movement and competition mitigation processes, 3.)
across-generation evolutionary processes, and 4.) multiple runs to
generate the statistics needed for comparative analyses. The focus of
our analysis is on the question of how the biomass production efficiency
and the diversity of guilds of foraging strategy types, exploiting
resources over a patchy landscape, evolve under clonal versus random
hermaphroditic sexual reproduction. Our results indicate greater biomass
production efficiency under clonal reproduction only at higher
population densities, and demonstrate that polymorphisms evolve and are
maintained under random mating systems. The latter result questions the
notion that some type of associative mating structure is needed to
maintain genetic polymorphisms among individuals exploiting a common
patchy resource on an otherwise spatially homogeneous landscape.
Tags
Genetic Algorithms
Simulation
behavior
models
Dynamics
ecology
systems
Prey
Natural-selection
Landscapes