A modelling approach to explore the critical environmental parameters influencing the growth and establishment of the invasive seaweed Undaria pinnatifida in Europe
Authored by James T Murphy, Mark P Johnson, Frederique Viard
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2016.01.038
Sponsors:
European Union
Irish Research Council
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A key factor to determine the expansion dynamics and future distribution
of non-native species is their physiological response to abiotic factors
and their changes over time. For this study we developed a spatially
explicit, agent-based model of population growth to represent the
complex population dynamics of invasive marine macroalgae with
heteromorphic biphasic life cycles. The model framework represents this
complex life cycle by treating the individual developmental stages
(gametophytes/sporophytes) as autonomous agents with unique
behaviour/growth parameters. It was parameterised to represent a
well-documented invasive algal species, the Asian kelp Undaria
pinnatifida, and validated against field results from an in situ
population in Brittany, France, showing good quantitative agreement in
terms of seasonal changes in abundance/recruitment and growth dynamics.
It was then used to explore how local environmental parameters (light
availability, temperature and day length) affect the population dynamics
of the individual developmental stages and the overall population
growth. This type of modelling approach represents a promising tool for
understanding the population dynamics of macroalgae from the bottom-up
in terms of the individual interactions between the independent life
history stages (both microscopic and macroscopic). It can be used to
trace back the behaviour of the population as a whole to the underlying
physiological and environmental processes impacting each developmental
stage and give insights into the roles these play in invasion success.
(C) 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Tags
Macroalgae
patterns
Australia
Impacts
Brown alga
St-malo
Laminariales
Phaeophyceae
Bay
Brittany