Double Trouble at High Density: Cross-Level Test of Resource-Related Adaptive Plasticity and Crowding-Related Fitness
Authored by Thomas G Preuss, Annemette Palmqvist, Andre Gergs
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0091503
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
Delphi
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?type=supplementary&id=info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0091503.s001
Abstract
Population size is often regulated by negative feedback between
population density and individual fitness. At high population densities, animals run into double trouble: they might concurrently suffer from
overexploitation of resources and also from negative interference among
individuals regardless of resource availability, referred to as
crowding. Animals are able to adapt to resource shortages by exhibiting
a repertoire of life history and physiological plasticities. In addition
to resource-related plasticity, crowding might lead to reduced fitness, with consequences for individual life history. We explored how different
mechanisms behind resource-related plasticity and crowding-related
fitness act independently or together, using the water flea Daphnia
magna as a case study. For testing hypotheses related to mechanisms of
plasticity and crowding stress across different biological levels, we
used an individual-based population model that is based on dynamic
energy budget theory. Each of the hypotheses, represented by a
sub-model, is based on specific assumptions on how the uptake and
allocation of energy are altered under conditions of resource shortage
or crowding. For cross-level testing of different hypotheses, we
explored how well the sub-models fit individual level data and also how
well they predict population dynamics under different conditions of
resource availability. Only operating resource-related and
crowding-related hypotheses together enabled accurate model predictions
of D. magna population dynamics and size structure. Whereas this study
showed that various mechanisms might play a role in the negative
feedback between population density and individual life history, it also
indicated that different density levels might instigate the onset of the
different mechanisms. This study provides an example of how the
integration of dynamic energy budget theory and individual-based
modelling can facilitate the exploration of mechanisms behind the
regulation of population size. Such understanding is important for
assessment, management and the conservation of populations and thereby
biodiversity in ecosystems.
Tags
Population-dynamics
Life-history
Energy budget theory
Daphnia-magna-straus
Different food levels
Feeding rate
Amplitude cycles
Model
selection
Offspring size
Filter screens