Local spatial structure and predator-prey dynamics: Counterintuitive effects of prey enrichment
Authored by DJ Murrell
Date Published: 2005
DOI: 10.1086/432035
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Abstract
The Lotka-Volterra predator-prey model with prey density dependence
shows the final prey density to be independent of its vital rates. This
result assumes the community to be well mixed so that encounters between
predators and prey occur as a product of the landscape densities, yet
empirical evidence suggests that over small spatial scales this may not
be the normal pattern. Starting from an individual-based model with
neighborhood interactions and movements, a deterministic approximation
is derived, and the effect of local spatial structure on equilibrium
densities is investigated. Incorporating local movements and local
interactions has important consequences for the community dynamics. Now
the final prey density is very much dependent on its birth, death, and
movement rates and in ways that seem counterintuitive. Increasing prey
fecundity or mobility and decreasing the coefficient of competition can
all lead to decreases in the final density of prey if the predator is
also relatively immobile. However, analysis of the deterministic
approximation makes the mechanism for these results clear; each of these
changes subtly alters the emergent spatial structure, leading to an
increase in the predator-prey spatial covariance at short distances and
hence to a higher predation pressure on the prey.
Tags
models
Dispersal
systems
scale
stability
Population-dynamics
Reproduction
Patchy environments
Host
Moment equations