Trait contributions to fish community assembly emerge from trophic interactions in an individual-based model
Authored by Donald L DeAngelis, Henrique C Giacomini, Joel C Trexler, Jr Miguel Petrere
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2012.12.003
Sponsors:
São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP)
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0304380012005698#sec0065
Abstract
Community ecology seeks to understand and predict the characteristics of
communities that can develop under different environmental conditions, but most theory has been built on analytical models that are limited in
the diversity of species traits that can be considered simultaneously.
We address that limitation with an individual-based model to simulate
assembly of fish communities characterized by life history and trophic
interactions with multiple physiological tradeoffs as constraints on
species performance. Simulation experiments were carried out to evaluate
the distribution of 6 life history and 4 feeding traits along gradients
of resource productivity and prey accessibility. These experiments
revealed that traits differ greatly in importance for species sorting
along the gradients. Body growth rate emerged as a key factor
distinguishing community types and defining patterns of community
stability and coexistence, followed by egg size and maximum body size.
Dominance by fast-growing, relatively large, and fecund species occurred
more frequently in cases where functional responses were saturated (i.e.
high productivity and/or prey accessibility). Such dominance was
associated with large biomass fluctuations and priority effects, which
prevented richness from increasing with productivity and may have
limited selection on secondary traits, such as spawning strategies and
relative size at maturation. Our results illustrate that the
distribution of species traits and the consequences for community
dynamics are intimately linked and strictly dependent on how the
benefits and costs of these traits are balanced across different
conditions. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Predation
growth
Food webs
Body-mass
Trout salvelinus-namaycush
Life-history changes
Dependent
mortality
Metabolic-rate
Size-spectrum
Yellow perch