The power of hybrid modelling: An example from aquatic ecosystems

Authored by Thomas G Preuss, Pernille Thorbek, Faten Gabsi, Tido Strauss, Monika Hammer-Wirtz

Date Published: 2017

DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2017.09.019

Sponsors: No sponsors listed

Platforms: Delphi

Model Documentation: ODD Flow charts Mathematical description

Model Code URLs: Model code not found

Abstract

Planktonic communities in ponds and lakes show a high annual dynamic controlled by biotic interactions, nutrients and weather. In recent years, there has been an increase in demand for realistic and accurate lake models to improve ecological management of water bodies and to answer ecotoxicological questions in aquatic risk assessment. Most existing aquatic models are either ecosystem models aimed at describing the overall ecosystem dynamics, but which are incapable of including individual life-cycles and plasticity, or very detailed and realistic individual-based models lacking an appropriate level of environmental complexity. To reconcile these concepts, we present here a modelling approach using an individual-based population model (IBM), integrated within an ecosystem lake model, to link responses at the individual and population levels. We combine an IBM for Daphnia magna (IDamP) and a complex biogeochemical lake model (StoLaM), to create the DaLaM (Daphnia Lake Model). We use DaLaM to predict population dynamics of D. magna and phytoplankton within a simplified, daphnid-dominated food web under field conditions. In DaLaM, relevant variable environmental conditions such as underwater light climate, water temperature, turbulence, and nutrient availability are realistically simulated forced by weather conditions. For model testing we used data from aquatic mesocosm field studies exhibiting variable nutrient and weather conditions and lasting from several months to 2 years. DaLaM gave improved predictions of the overall population patterns of daphnids and phytoplankton in the mesocosms in contrast to its separate submodels. This study is an example of successfully merging individual-based population models with dynamic ecosystem models utilising the accuracy of the former and the dynamic environment of the latter to simulate more realistic field populations. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
Tags
Individual-based model Population dynamics plankton zooplankton Quality Population-dynamics Temperature Daphnia-magna Life-history Body-size Mesocosm Ecosystem lake model Producer-grazer systems Lake kinneret Stoichiometry