de Roos André M, Persson Lennart
Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Theor Popul Biol. 2003 Feb;63(1):1-16. doi: 10.1016/s0040-5809(02)00009-6.
In this paper we investigate the consequences of size-dependent competition among the individuals of a consumer population by analyzing the dynamic properties of a physiologically structured population model. Only 2 size-classes of individuals are distinguished: juveniles and adults. Juveniles and adults both feed on one and the same resource and hence interact by means of exploitative competition. Juvenile individuals allocate all assimilated energy into development and mature on reaching a fixed developmental threshold. The combination of this fixed threshold and the resource-dependent developmental rate, implies that the juvenile delay between birth and the onset of reproduction may vary in time. Adult individuals allocate all assimilated energy to reproduction. Mortality of both juveniles and adults is assumed to be inversely proportional to the amount of energy assimilated. In this setting we study how the dynamics of the population are influenced by the relative foraging capabilities of juveniles and adults. In line with results that we previously obtained in size-structured consumer-resource models with pulsed reproduction, population cycles primarily occur when either juveniles or adults have a distinct competitive advantage. When adults have a larger per capita feeding rate and are hence competitively superior to juveniles, population oscillations occur that are primarily induced by the fact that the duration of the juvenile period changes with changing food conditions. These cycles do not occur when the juvenile delay is a fixed parameter. When juveniles are competitively superior, two different types of population fluctuations can occur: (1) rapid, low-amplitude fluctuations having a period of half the juvenile delay and (2) slow, large-amplitude fluctuations characterized by a period, which is roughly equal to the juvenile delay. The analysis of simplified versions of the structured model indicates that these two types of oscillations also occur if mortality and/or development is independent of food density, i.e. in a situation with a constant juvenile developmental delay and a constant, food-independent background mortality. Thus, the oscillations that occur when juveniles are more competitive are induced by the juvenile delay per se. When juveniles exert a larger foraging pressure on the shared resource, maturation implies an increase not only in adult density, but also in food density and consequently fecundity. Our analysis suggests that this correlation in time between adult density and fecundity is crucial for the occurrence of population cycles when juveniles are competitively superior.
在本文中,我们通过分析一个生理结构种群模型的动态特性,研究了消费者种群个体间大小依赖竞争的后果。仅区分了两种个体大小类别:幼体和成体。幼体和成体都以同一种资源为食,因此通过剥削性竞争进行相互作用。幼体将所有同化能量用于发育,并在达到固定发育阈值时成熟。这种固定阈值与资源依赖发育率的结合意味着,出生与繁殖开始之间的幼体延迟可能随时间变化。成体将所有同化能量用于繁殖。假定幼体和成体的死亡率都与同化能量的量成反比。在这种情况下,我们研究种群动态如何受到幼体和成体相对觅食能力的影响。与我们之前在具有脉冲繁殖的大小结构消费者 - 资源模型中获得的结果一致,种群周期主要在幼体或成体具有明显竞争优势时出现。当成体具有更大的人均摄食率,因此在竞争上优于幼体时,就会出现种群振荡,这主要是由于幼体期的持续时间随食物条件变化而引起的。当幼体延迟是一个固定参数时,这些周期不会出现。当幼体在竞争上占优时,会出现两种不同类型的种群波动:(1)快速、低振幅波动,其周期为幼体延迟的一半;(2)缓慢、高振幅波动,其特征周期大致等于幼体延迟。对该结构模型简化版本的分析表明,如果死亡率和/或发育与食物密度无关,即在幼体发育延迟恒定且存在恒定的、与食物无关的背景死亡率的情况下,也会出现这两种振荡类型。因此,当幼体更具竞争力时出现的振荡是由幼体延迟本身引起的。当幼体对共享资源施加更大的觅食压力时,成熟不仅意味着成体密度增加,还意味着食物密度增加,从而导致繁殖力增加。我们的分析表明,当成体密度与繁殖力在时间上的这种相关性对于幼体在竞争上占优时种群周期的出现至关重要。