Egg limitation and individual variation in parasitization risk among hosts in host-parasitoid dynamics
Authored by Toshinori Okuyama
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.2916
Sponsors:
Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Egg limitation is known to destabilize host-parasitoid dynamics. This
study reexamines the effect of egg limitation in light of the individual
variation in parasitization risk among hosts (e.g., some hosts are more
likely to be parasitized than others). Previous studies have considered
egg limitation (predicted as a destabilizing factor) and individual
variation among hosts (predicted as a stabilizing factor) in isolation;
however, their interaction is not known. An individual-based model was
used to examine the effects of each factor and their interaction. The
model-based analysis shows a clear interaction between egg limitation
and individual variation in risk among hosts. Egg limitation can both
stabilize and destabilize host-parasitioid dynamics depending on the
presence and absence of the risk variation. The result suggests that the
population-dynamic consequences of egg limitation are more complex than
previously thought and emphasizes the importance of the simultaneous
consideration of multiple ecological factors (with individual-level
details) to uncover potential interactions among them.
Tags
Individual-based model
models
Aggregation
Egg limitation
Individual variation
Superparasitism