Huang Yunxin, Yang Nianwan, Qin Yun, An Feng, Li Zhaohua, Wan Fanghao
School of Resource and Environmental Science, Hubei University, Wuhan, Hubei 430062, PR China.
State Key Laboratory for Biology of Plant Diseases and Insect Pests, Institute of Plant Protection, China Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Beijing 100080, PR China.
J Theor Biol. 2016 Mar 21;393:43-50. doi: 10.1016/j.jtbi.2015.12.032. Epub 2016 Jan 15.
Previous studies based on simple non-spatial model have suggested that autoparasitism, in which females develop as primary endoparasitoids of hosts while males develop at the expense of primary parasitoids, stabilizes host-parasitoid steady state. To date, however, how the stabilizing role of autoparasitism would be affected by more complex spatial factors has not been adequately investigated. To address the issue, here we analyzed a spatially extended two-patch host-parasitoid model and compared it with the corresponding non-spatial model. Results showed that in the non-spatial model and the case of autoparasitoid, the host-parasitoid steady states can be unstable if the host׳s intrinsic rate of growth and/or carrying capacity is sufficiently large. However, in the spatially extended two-patch model with parasitoid migration, the unstable host-parasitoid steady states in each local patch may become stable, provided there is certain spatial unevenness in host growth and/or carrying capacity. Therefore, the migration of parasitoid together with spatial unevenness in host growth and/or carrying capacity stabilizes the host-parasitoid interactions. The stabilizing effects are stronger with the host density-dependent migration of parasitoid than with the random migration of parasitoid. In the case of primary parasitoid, the model demonstrated similar stabilizing effects associated with the migration of parasitoid. However, the parameter conditions for stability are much more stringent than in the case of autoparasitoid. We concluded that the stabilizing effects of parasitoid migration and autoparasitism can add to each other, leading to more stable host-parasitoid interactions.
以往基于简单非空间模型的研究表明,自体寄生现象(即雌性作为宿主的初级体内寄生蜂发育,而雄性以初级寄生蜂为代价发育)可稳定宿主 - 寄生蜂稳态。然而,迄今为止,自体寄生现象的稳定作用如何受到更复杂空间因素的影响尚未得到充分研究。为解决这一问题,我们在此分析了一个空间扩展的双斑块宿主 - 寄生蜂模型,并将其与相应的非空间模型进行比较。结果表明,在非空间模型和自体寄生蜂的情况下,如果宿主的内在增长率和/或承载能力足够大,宿主 - 寄生蜂稳态可能不稳定。然而,在具有寄生蜂迁移的空间扩展双斑块模型中,只要宿主生长和/或承载能力存在一定的空间不均匀性,每个局部斑块中不稳定的宿主 - 寄生蜂稳态可能会变得稳定。因此,寄生蜂的迁移以及宿主生长和/或承载能力的空间不均匀性稳定了宿主 - 寄生蜂的相互作用。与寄生蜂的随机迁移相比,寄生蜂的宿主密度依赖性迁移具有更强的稳定作用。在初级寄生蜂的情况下,该模型显示出与寄生蜂迁移相关的类似稳定作用。然而,稳定性的参数条件比自体寄生蜂的情况要严格得多。我们得出结论,寄生蜂迁移和自体寄生现象的稳定作用可以相互叠加,从而导致宿主 - 寄生蜂的相互作用更加稳定。