InSTREAM-Gen: Modelling eco-evolutionary dynamics of trout populations under anthropogenic environmental change
Authored by Volker Grimm, Juergen Groeneveld, Steven F Railsback, Daniel Ayllon, Simone Vincenzi, Ana Almodoevar
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2015.07.026
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/MiamiMultiMediaURL/1-s2.0-S0304380015003324/1-s2.0-S0304380015003324-mmc2.zip/271743/html/S0304380015003324/38933308ab622cefd8e4da52fabe764a/mmc2.zip
Abstract
Current rates of environmental change are exceeding the capacity of many
populations to adapt to new conditions and thus avoid demographic
collapse and ultimate extinction. In particular, cold-water freshwater
fish species are predicted to experience strong selective pressure from
climate change and a wide range of interacting anthropogenic stressors
in the near future. To implement effective management and conservation
measures, it is crucial to quantify the maximum rate of change that
cold-water freshwater fish populations can withstand. Here, we present a
spatially explicit eco-genetic individual-based model, inSTREAM-Gen, to
predict the eco-evolutionary dynamics of stream-dwelling trout under
anthropogenic environmental change. The model builds on a well-tested
demographic model, which includes submodels of river dynamics, bioenergetics, and adaptive habitat selection, with a new genetic module
that allows exploration of genetic and life-history adaptations to new
environments. The genetic module models the transmission of two key
traits, size at emergence and maturity size threshold. We parameterized
the model for a brown trout (Salmo trutta L.) population at the warmest
edge of its range to validate it and analyze its sensitivity to
parameters under contrasting thermal profiles. To illustrate potential
applications of the model, we analyzed the population's demographic and
evolutionary dynamics under scenarios of (1) climate change-induced
warming, and (2) warming plus flow reduction resulting from climate and
land use change, compared to (3) a baseline of no environmental change.
The model predicted severe declines in density and biomass under climate
warming. These declines were lower than expected at range margins
because of evolution towards smaller size at both emergence and
maturation compared to the natural evolution under the baseline
conditions. Despite stronger evolutionary responses, declining rates
were substantially larger under the combined warming and flow reduction
scenario, leading to a high probability of population extinction over
contemporary time frames. Therefore, adaptive responses could not
prevent extinction under high rates of environmental change. Our model
demonstrates critical elements of next generation ecological modelling
aiming at predictions in a changing world as it accounts for spatial and
temporal resource heterogeneity, while merging individual behaviour and
bioenergetics with microevolutionary adaptations. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V.
All rights reserved.
Tags
Individual-based model
Agent-based models
Atlantic salmon
Climate-change
Sensitivity-analysis
Brown trout
Habitat-selection
Ecological
models
Genetic-variation
Fish populations