Trait-mediated density-dependence and community level eco-evolutionary dynamics

Lead Research Organisation: University of Sheffield
Department Name: Animal and Plant Sciences

Abstract

Scientists achieve good understanding about a system through a mixture of observation, experimentation and mathematical modeling. If biologists can build a model that can be used to accurately predict the behavior of populations and communities in the wild, they have a good understanding of the system. Unfortunately constructing such models is a real challenge for most free-living populations and communities. There are several reasons for this. First, it is time consuming and expensive to collect a sufficiently large quantity of observational data to robustly parameterize models. Second, most natural systems do not easily lend themselves to experimental manipulation that are invaluable in gaining insight that cannot be reached from observation alone. Third, multiple aspects of populations and communities often change together when the system is perturbed, including the dynamics of population size, average body size of juveniles and adults, gene frequencies and life history traits like life expectancy at birth. It is only recently that biologists have worked out to simultaneously model the dynamics of populations, genes and traits. These models are called integral projection models.

Although integral projection models offer enormous potential for understanding the dynamics of natural systems, their development is still in its infancy. In particular the treatment of competition between individuals of the same species is treated naively. In addition, there is considerable work to be done to use these models to explore the way species within a community interact. In this proposal we will start by taking already published integral projection models that include competition between individuals of the same species and will use novel methods to analyze them to gain general insight into how different types of competition between individuals simultaneously impacts the dynamics of population size, body size and life history.

Next, we will use some exceptional detailed experimental data from a freshwater fish community in Trinidad to build models of interacting species. We will use these models to predict the dynamics of natural streams where dynamics have been observed for many years. The proposed work is consequently exceptionally good value for money because we will use such extensive existing data. Through a series of analyses of our models, and potentially some additional experiments, we expect to build models that accurately capture the dynamics of the natural stream community. By the end of the work we expect to have achieved a better understanding of the dynamics of this system than of any other free-living community under study.

Planned Impact

Who will benefit?

Anyone interested in predicting how populations or communities will respond to changes in the environment will be interested in this research. This is because the approaches we will develop will allow the ecological and evolutionary consequences of environmental change to populations and communities to be investigated in greater detail than ever before. Beneficiaries will include anyone interested in managing a population or community, including governmental departments like DEFRA, non-government organizations including Flora and Fauna International and companies like MRag.

How will they benefit?

These organizations will benefit from the research because the novel modeling methods we will devise are likely to improve the predictive power of population- and community-level models. The PI has already shown how the development of methods in structured models can benefit non-academic organizations. He has previously used structured models to predict the future population size and structure for China for Rio Tinto, to advise Scottish estate owners on red deer management, and he has recently been in discussion with medics on ways to improve modeling the social, healthcare and economic consequences of the continuing obesity epidemic. The modeling advances we will realize in the work described in this application will improve the flexibility of structured models to make predictions.

Publications

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Childs DZ (2016) The evolution of labile traits in sex- and age-structured populations. in The Journal of animal ecology

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Griffiths JI (2020) Individual differences determine the strength of ecological interactions. in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

 
Description We have developed new statistical models for quantifying asymmetric competition. The work has been written up and is now published in PNAS.
Exploitation Route The methods could be applied to a wide range of systems.
Sectors Environment

 
Description We have developed methods for understanding competition in complex systems where competitive ability depends on individual traits
First Year Of Impact 2017
Sector Environment
Impact Types Economic

 
Title Individual differences determine the strength of ecological interactions 
Description Biotic interactions are central to both ecological and evolutionary dynamics. In the vast majority of empirical studies, the strength of intraspecific interactions is estimated by using simple mea- sures of population size. Biologists have long known that these are crude metrics, with experiments and theory suggesting that interactions between individuals should depend on traits, such as body size. Despite this, it has been difficult to estimate the impact of traits on competitive ability from ecological field data, and this explains why the strength of biotic interactions has empirically been treated in a simplistic manner. Using long-term observational data from four different populations, we show that large Trinidadian guppies impose a significantly larger competitive pressure on conspecifics than individuals that are smaller; in other words, competition is asymmetric. When we incorporate this asymmetry into integral projection models, the predicted size structure is much closer to what we see in the field compared with models where competition is independent of body size. This difference in size structure translates into a twofold difference in reproductive output. This demonstrates how the nature of ecological interactions drives the size structure, which, in turn, will have important implications for both the ecological and evolutionary dynamics. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2020 
Provided To Others? Yes  
URL http://datadryad.org/stash/dataset/doi:10.5061/dryad.76hdr7stj