How might we model an ecosystem?
Authored by Geoffrey Caron-Lormier, David A Bohan, Cathy Hawes, Alan Raybould, Alison J Haughton, Roger W Humphry
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2009.04.021
Sponsors:
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
Scottish Government
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Predicting ecosystem effects is of crucial importance in a world at
threat from natural and human-mediated change. Here we propose an
ecologically defensible representation of an ecosystem that facilitates
predictive modelling. The representation has its roots in the early
trophic and energetic theory of ecosystem dynamics and more recent
functional ecology and network theory. Using the arable ecosystem of the
UK as an example, we show that the representation allows simplification
from the many interacting plant and invertebrate species, typically
present in arable fields, to a more tractable number of
trophic-functional types. Our compound hypothesis is that
``trophic-functional types of plants and invertebrates can be used to
explain the structure, diversity and dynamics of arable ecosystems{''}.
The trophic-functional types act as containers for individuals, within
an individual-based model, sharing similar trophic behaviour and traits
of biomass transformation. Biomass, or energy, flows between the types
and this allows the key ecological properties of individual abundance
and body mass, at each trophic height, to be followed through
simulations. Our preliminary simulation results suggest that the model
shows great promise. The simulation output for simple ecosystems, populated with realistic parameter values, is consistent with current
laboratory observations and provides exciting indications that it could
reproduce field scale phenomena. The model also produces output that
links the individual, population and community scales, and may be
analysed and tested using community, network (food web) and population
dynamic theory. We show that we can include management effects, as
perturbations to parameter values, for modelling the effects of change
and indicating management responses to change. This model will require
robust analysis, testing and validation, and we discuss how we will
achieve this in the future. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Tags
individual-based models
Population-dynamics
Food-web structure
Interaction strength
Tropical forest
Modified herbicide-tolerant
Farm-scale evaluations
Invertebrate responses
Functional diversity
Cereal
aphids