Individual-based modeling of the spread of pine wilt disease: vector beetle dispersal and the Allee effect
Authored by Fugo Takasu
Date Published: 2009
DOI: 10.1007/s10144-009-0145-5
Sponsors:
Japanese Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Pine wilt disease is caused by the pinewood nematode Bursaphelenchus
xylophilus, which is vectored by the Japanese pine sawyer beetle
Monochamus alternatus. Due to their mutualistic relationship, according
to which the nematode weakens and makes trees available for beetle
reproduction and the beetle in turn carries and transmits the nematode
to healthy pine trees, this disease has resulted in severe damage to
pine trees in Japan in recent decades. Previous studies have worked on
modeling of population dynamics of the vector beetle and the pine tree
to explore spatial expansion of the disease using an integro-difference
equation with a dispersal kernel that describes beetle mobility over
space. In this paper, I revisit these previous models but retaining
individuality: by considering mechanistic interactions at the individual
level it is shown that the Allee effect, an increasing per-capita growth
rate as population abundance increases, can arise in the beetle dynamics
because of the necessity for beetles to contact pine trees at least
twice to reproduce successfully. The incubation period after which a
tree contacted by a first beetle becomes ready for beetle oviposition by
later beetles is crucial for the emergence of this Allee effect. It is
also shown, however, that the strength of this Allee effect depends
strongly on biological mechanistic properties, especially on beetle
mobility. Realistic individual-based modeling highlights the importance
of how spatial scales are dealt with in mathematical models. The link
between mechanistic individual-based modeling and conventional
analytical approaches is also discussed.
Tags
time
growth
stochasticity
Japan
Equations
Discrete
Invasions
Trees
Nematoda-aphelenchoididae
Bursaphelenchus