Guichard Frédéric, Halpin Patti M, Allison Gary W, Lubchenco Jane, Menge Bruce A
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544, USA.
Am Nat. 2003 Jun;161(6):889-904. doi: 10.1086/375300. Epub 2003 Jun 10.
Local interactions, biotic and abiotic, can have a strong influence on the large-scale properties of ecosystems. However, ecological models often explore the influence of local biotic interactions where physical disturbance is included as a large-scale and imposed source of variability but is not allowed to interact with biotic processes at the local scale. In marine intertidal communities dominated by mussels, wave disturbances create gaps in the mussel bed that recover through a successional sequence. We present a lattice model of mussel disturbance dynamics that allows local interactions between wave disturbance and mussel recolonization, in which each cell of the lattice can be empty, occupied by a mussel bed element, or disturbed (which corresponds to a newly disturbed cell that has unstable edges). As in natural ecosystems, wave disturbance can also spread from disturbed to adjacent occupied cells, and recolonization can also spread from occupied to adjacent empty cells. We first validate the local rules from artificial gap experiments and from natural gap monitoring along the Oregon coast. We analyze the properties of the model system as a function of different oceanographic forcings of productivity and disturbance. We show that the mussel bed can go through phase transitions characterized by a large sensitivity of mussel cover and patterns to oceanographic forcings but also that criticality (scale invariance) is observed over wide ranges of parameters, which suggests self-organization. We also show that spatial patterns in the intertidal can provide a robust signature of local processes and can inform about oceanographic regimes. We do so by comparing the large-scale patterns of the simulation (scaling exponents) with field data, which suggest that some experimental sites are close to criticality. Our results suggest that regional patterns in disturbed populations can be explained by local biotic and abiotic processes submitted to oceanographic forcing.
生物和非生物的局部相互作用会对生态系统的大规模属性产生强烈影响。然而,生态模型通常探讨局部生物相互作用的影响,其中物理干扰被视为大规模且强加的变异性来源,但不允许其在局部尺度上与生物过程相互作用。在以贻贝为主导的海洋潮间带群落中,波浪干扰会在贻贝床中形成缺口,这些缺口会通过演替序列得以恢复。我们提出了一个贻贝干扰动态的格子模型,该模型允许波浪干扰与贻贝重新定殖之间的局部相互作用,其中格子的每个单元格可以是空的、被贻贝床元素占据,或者被干扰(这对应于一个新受干扰且边缘不稳定的单元格)。与自然生态系统一样,波浪干扰也可以从受干扰的单元格传播到相邻的被占据单元格,重新定殖也可以从被占据的单元格传播到相邻的空单元格。我们首先根据人工缺口实验以及俄勒冈海岸的自然缺口监测来验证局部规则。我们分析模型系统的属性,将其作为生产力和干扰的不同海洋学强迫的函数。我们表明,贻贝床可以经历相变,其特征是贻贝覆盖度和模式对海洋学强迫具有很大的敏感性,但在广泛的参数范围内也观察到临界性(尺度不变性),这表明存在自组织现象。我们还表明,潮间带的空间模式可以提供局部过程的稳健特征,并可以反映海洋学状况。我们通过将模拟的大规模模式(标度指数)与实地数据进行比较来做到这一点,这表明一些实验地点接近临界状态。我们的结果表明,受干扰种群的区域模式可以由受海洋学强迫影响的局部生物和非生物过程来解释。