Artigo Revisado por pares

Using Mechanistic Models to Understand Synchrony in Forest Insect Populations: The North American Gypsy Moth as a Case Study

2008; University of Chicago Press; Volume: 172; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1086/591679

ISSN

1537-5323

Autores

Karen C. Abbott, Greg Dwyer,

Tópico(s)

Plant and animal studies

Resumo

In many forest insects, subpopulations fluctuate concurrently across large geographical areas, a phenomenon known as population synchrony. Because of the large spatial scales involved, empirical tests to identify the causes of synchrony are often impractical. Simple models are, therefore, a useful aid to understanding, but data often seem to contradict model predictions. For instance, chaotic population dynamics and limited dispersal are not uncommon among synchronous forest defoliators, yet both make it difficult to achieve synchrony in simple models. To test whether this discrepancy can be explained by more realistic models, we introduced dispersal and spatially correlated stochasticity into a mechanistic population model for the North American gypsy moth Lymantria dispar. The resulting model shows both chaotic dynamics and spatial synchrony, suggesting that chaos and synchrony can be reconciled by the incorporation of realistic dynamics and spatial structure. By relating alterations in model structure to changes in synchrony levels, we show that the synchrony is due to a combination of spatial covariance in environmental stochasticity and the origins of chaos in our multispecies model.

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