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Ronald Westra

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... two species of mites to demonstrate coupled oscillations ... six-spotted mite (Eotetranychus sexmaculatus) as the prey. Predator-prey interaction in vivo ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ronald Westra


1
  • Ronald Westra
  • Department of Mathematics
  • Faculty of Humanities Sciences
  • Universiteit Maastricht

2
  • 2. PREDATOR-PREY
  • SYSTEMS

3
Overview
  • From one to two equations
  • Volterras model of predator-prey (PP) systems
  • Why are PP models useful?
  • Examples from nature
  • Sequoias
  • Predators, Preys, and Hurricanes
  • Three-species interactions
  • Biodiversity
  • Relation to future tasks

4
Recall the Logistic Model
Large P slows down P
Logistic model a.k.a. the Verhulst model
  • Pn is the fraction of the maximum population size
    1
  • ? is a parameter

5
Interacting quantities
  • The logistic model describes the dynamics
    (change) of a single quantity interacting with
    itself
  • We now move to models describing two (or more)
    interacting quantities

6
Fish statistics
  • Vito Volterra (1860-1940) a famous Italian
    mathematician
  • Father of Humberto D'Ancona, a biologist studying
    the populations of various species of fish in the
    Adriatic Sea
  • The numbers of species sold on the fish markets
    of three ports Fiume, Trieste, and Venice.

7
percentages of predator species (sharks, skates,
rays, ..)
8
Volterras model
  • Two (simplifying) assumptions
  • The predator species is totally dependent on the
    prey species as its only food supply
  • The prey species has an unlimited food supply and
    no threat to its growth other than the specific
    predator

9
Behaviour of the Volterras model
Limit cycle
Oscillatory behaviour
10
Effect of changing the parameters (1)
Behaviour is qualitatively the same. Only the
amplitude changes.
11
Effect of changing the parameters (2)
Behaviour is qualitatively different. A fixed
point instead of a limit cycle.
12
Different modes
13
Predator-prey interaction in vivo
Huffaker (1958) reared two species of mites to
demonstrate coupled oscillations of predator and
prey densities in the laboratory. He used
Typhlodromus occidentalis as the predator and the
six-spotted mite (Eotetranychus sexmaculatus) as
the prey
14
3D Java simulation of PP model
  • http//www.stensland.net/java/erin.html

15
Why are PP models useful?
  • They model the simplest interaction among two
    systems and describe natural patterns
  • Repetitive growth-decay patterns, e.g.,
  • World population growth
  • Diseases

time
16
More complicated interactions
  • Clinton established the Giant Sequoia National
    Monument to protect the forest from culling,
    logging and clearing.
  • But many believe that Clintons measures added
    fuel to the fires.
  • Tree-thinning is required to prevent large fires.
  • Fires are required to clear land and to promote
    new growth.
  • Smokey Bear did too good a job, said Matt
    Mathes, a Forest Service spokesman. It was a
    well-meaning policy with unintentional
    consequences.

17
Sequias
18
Predator versus Prey?
  • Fire acts as prey because it is needed for
    growth
  • Fire acts as predator because it may set the
    tree on fire
  • Tree acts as prey for the predator
  • If trees die out, the predator dies out too

19
Predators, Preys and Hurricanes
20
Biodiversity
  • Human alteration of the global environment has
    triggered the sixth major extinction event in the
    history of life and caused widespread changes in
    the global distribution of organisms. These
    changes in biodiversity alter ecosystem processes
    and change the resilience of ecosystems to
    environmental change. This has profound
    consequences for services that humans derive from
    ecosystems. The large ecological and societal
    consequences of changing biodiversity should be
    minimized to preserve options for future
    solutions to global environmental problems.

F. Stuart Chapin III et al. (2000)
21
The role of biodiversity in global change
22
Consequences of reduced biodiversity
  • "...decreasing biodiversity will tend to
    increase the overall mean interaction strength,
    on average, and thus increase the probability
    that ecosystems undergo destabilizing dynamics
    and collapses."

Kevin Shear McCann (2000)
23
equilibrium states
  • Complex systems are assumed to converge towards
    an equilibrium state.Equilibrium state two (or
    more) opposite processes take place at equal rates

VIDEO
stable
unstable
24
Predator-Prey ModelsForaging according to the
random walk model
25
Two examples from research
  • Modelling foraging
  • Decaying step-lengths in foraging
  • Modelling semantic network dynamics
  • Growth of knowledge

26
Foraging patterns in nature
Random walk
Levy flight
27
Distribution of step lengths l
28
Slope of the log plot equals ?
29
Universal foraging behaviour
  • Foraging behaviour in sparse food environments is
    characterised by Lévy-flights with ? ? 2 is
    performed by
  • Albatrosses
  • foraging bumblebees
  • Deer
  • Amoebas
  • In dense food environments ? gt 3 (random walk)

30
END LECTURE 2
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