Individual traits as drivers of spatial dispersal and infestation patterns in a host-bark beetle system
Authored by Markus Kautz, Reinhard Schopf, Muhammad Ali Imron
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2013.11.022
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://ars-els-cdn-com.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/content/image/1-s2.0-S030438001300570X-mmc1.zip
Abstract
Tree-killing bark beetle species such as Ips sp. and Dendroctonus sp.
are considered one of the most severe biotic hazards affecting forests
at the global scale. Although spatio-temporal patterns of dispersal and
infestations have been widely observed and statistically analyzed
profound knowledge about the host-bark beetle interactions that evoke
these patterns is scarce. We developed an individual-based and spatially
explicit model - the Infestation Pattern Simulation (IPS) model - to
elucidate how individual traits affect system-level dispersal and
infestation patterns. IPS simulates processes including dispersal, host
selection, aggregation, and finally colonization, or rejection by host
defence on a local scale. Host-bark beetle interactions are implemented
highly dynamically, i.e. individual adaptive behavior takes into account
space- and time-dependent variations in traits. Simulations consider one
dispersal wave starting from a single source located in a virtual stand.
Finally, the effects of both bark beetle- and host tree-specific
parameters on emerging system patterns were quantified using a
one-factor-at-a-time sensitivity analysis approach. As system-level
response variables we used (i) percentage of successful beetles, (ii)
number of infestations, and (iii) maximum infestation distance to
source. Among bark beetle-specific parameters those affecting host
recognition (e.g. perceptual range, energetic level) and attack
synchrony (e.g. source size, time lag between flight cohorts) were
revealed to be highly sensitive with regard to all three response
variables. In addition, the host tree's resistance and spatial
distribution is also shown to be decisive for infestation occurrence.
The model provides a conceptual framework linking individual behavior to
system-level patterns. Thus it represents a powerful tool -
complementing lab- and field-based approaches - which may contribute to
our understanding of the complex spatio-temporal processes that govern
host-bark beetle dynamics. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
Mountain pine-beetle
Ips-typographus l
Temperature-dependent
development
Effective attraction radius
Pheromone-baited traps
Douglas-fir beetle
L col
Selection behavior
Intraspecific
competition
Dendroctonus-ponderosae