Asymmetric competition as a natural outcome of neighbour interactions among plants: results from the field-of-neighbourhood modelling approach
Authored by Volker Grimm, Uta Berger, Hanno Hildenbrandt, S Bauer, T Wyszomirski
Date Published: 2004
DOI: 10.1023/b:vege.0000019041.42440.ea
Sponsors:
UFZ-Centre for Environmental Research
Platforms:
C++
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Numerous attempts have been made to infer the mode of competition from
size or biomass distributions of plant cohorts. However, since the
relationship between mode of competition and size distributions may be
obscured by a variety of factors such as spatial configuration, density
or resource level, empirical investigations often produce ambiguous
results. Likewise, the findings of theoretical analyses of asymmetric
competition are equivocal. In this paper, we analyse the mode of
competition in an individual-based model which is based on the new
field-of-neighbourhood approach. In this approach, plants have a zone of
influence that determines the distance up to which neighbours are
influenced. Additionally, a superimposed field within the zone of
influence defines phenomenologically the strength of influence of an
individual on neighbouring plants. We investigated competition at both
individual and population level and characterised the influence of
density and of the shape of the field-of-neighbourhood on occurrence and
degree of competitive asymmetry. After finding asymmetric competition
emerging in all scenarios, we argue that asymmetric competition is a
natural consequence of local competition among neighbouring plants.
Tags
Distributions
interference
Mechanisms
Density
Populations
Individuals
Dynamic-models
Symmetry
Spatial-pattern
Size-structure