Predicting population viability of a monocarpic perennial dune thistle using individual-based models
Authored by Samniqueka J Halsey, Scott Cinel, Jared Wilson, Timothy J Bell, Marlin Bowles
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2017.06.014
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Plants inhabit spatially and temporally heterogeneous habitat with
various landscape characteristics influencing growth, survival and
reproduction. Utilizing microhabitat variables such as slope, elevation
and aspect can allow for a spatially explicit approach to understand the
important ecological drivers of population persistence. By applying
knowledge about individual plant demographics and their response to
microhabitat variables, inferences into how the entire population
responds over time are made possible. We used a spatially-explicit
individual based modeling (SEIBM) approach to model the population
demographics and distribution of a restored population of Cirsium
pitcheri in Illinois. Using regression analysis, we estimated model
parameters for survival, growth and reproduction which were subsequently
chosen by comparing observed and projected abundances. Projected
population abundances followed the same trajectory as the observed
abundances for our chosen model. Using that model, 100-year projections
revealed that this Illinois Beach population has a median time to
extinction (MTE) of 16 years, presenting a comparable outlook for C.
pitcheri as compared to traditional matrix modeling approaches. We then
analyzed how landscape characteristics influenced plant occupancy via
hotspot analysis to determine optimum locations. Optimum plant habitat
include those on low slopes and higher elevations. This approach
presents a formal modeling exercise for using spatially explicit,
individual-based models to conduct population viability analysis. By
comparing this SEIBM approach to matrix modeling methods, we affirm that
SEIBM are a valid tool for population viability analysis while also
having the ability to include information that is spatially explicit to
the habitat upon which C. pitcheri occupies. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All
rights reserved.
Tags
Population dynamics
ecology
Topography
Extinction
Size
Establishment
Reintroduction
Spatially explicit individual based model
Cirsium pitcheri
Population
viability analysis
Cirsium-pitcheri