Effects of local interaction and dispersal on the dynamics of size-structured populations
Authored by Thomas Adams, Graeme Ackland, Glenn Marion, Colin Edwards
Date Published: 2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2011.02.006
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
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Abstract
Traditional approaches to ecosystem modelling have relied on spatially
homogeneous approximations to interaction, growth and death. More
recently, spatial interaction and dispersal have also been considered.
While these leads to certain changes in fine-scale community dynamics, their effect is sometimes fairly minimal, and demographic scenarios in
which this difference is important have not been systematically
investigated.
We take a simple mean-field model which simulates birth, growth and
death processes, and rewrite it with spatially distributed discrete
individuals. Each individual's growth and mortality is determined by a
competition measure which captures the effects of neighbours in a way
which retains the conceptual simplicity of a generic, analytically-solvable model. Although the model is generic, we here
parameterise it using data from Caledonian Scots Pine stands. The
dynamics of simulated populations, starting from a plantation lattice
configuration, mirror those of well-established qualitative descriptions
of natural forest stand behaviour; an analogy which assists in
understanding the transition from artificial to old-growth structure.
When parameterised for Scots Pine populations, the signature of spatial
processes is evident, but their effect on first-order statistics, such
as density and biomass, is fairly limited. The sensitivity of this
result to variation in each individual rate parameter is investigated;
distinct differences between spatial and mean-field models are seen only
upon alteration of the interaction strength parameters, and in low
density populations. Under the Scots pine parameterisation, dispersal
also has an effect on spatial structure, but not density and biomass.
Only in more intense competitive scenarios does altering the relative
scales of dispersal and interaction lead to a clear signal in first
order behaviour. The study acts as an important reminder that, even in
scenarios where individual processes are localised in space, simple
models are often sufficient to capture many population scale aspects of
observed ecological dynamics. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights
reserved.
Tags
Competition
models
growth
Plant-communities
Forest dynamics
Species-diversity
Trees
Stand structure
Spatial-pattern
Moment equations