Body size modulates demographic patterns of top predators and their native and invasive prey: A biomathematical approach

William Campillay-Llanos, Manuel Pinto, Christian Osorio
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Abstract

The arrival of invasive species in native communities impacts the structure and functioning of ecosystems, and is considered a critical indicator of loss of biodiversity. Exploring the effects of new species in communities presents challenges addressable through theoretical ecology. Species body size not only shapes trophic relationships, but may also impact predator success and facilitate species coexistence. However, little attention has been paid to the effects of differences in species body size on interactions between native and invasive primary consumers, which could be relevant to their coexistence with higher-level predators. Our aim is to investigate demographic patterns using a dynamic, mechanistic model of two age-structured primary consumers (one invasive and one native) sharing a plant resource and preyed upon by a common predator. In our model, we highlight three crucial phenomena: the structuring of primary consumers into adults and juveniles, reproduction occurring in discrete pulses, and the seasonal addition of new individuals to the population. Hence, the success of one species over the other relies on its reproductive capacity to incorporate individuals in each reproductive cycle. Our simulations reveal that abundance patterns are influenced by body size, suggesting that changes in predator body size could serve as key indicators of shifts in community structure.
体型调节顶级掠食者及其本地和外来猎物的种群模式:生物数学方法
入侵物种进入本地群落会影响生态系统的结构和功能,被认为是生物多样性丧失的一个重要指标。通过理论生态学来探索新物种对群落的影响是一项挑战。物种的体型不仅影响营养关系,还可能影响捕食者的成功率并促进物种共存。然而,人们很少关注物种体型的差异对本地和外来初级消费者之间相互作用的影响,而这可能与它们与更高层次捕食者的共存有关。我们的目的是利用一个动态的机制模型,研究两个年龄结构的初级消费者(一个入侵者和一个本地者)共享一种植物资源并被共同的捕食者捕食的人口模式。在我们的模型中,我们强调了三个关键现象:初级消费者的结构分为成体和幼体,繁殖发生在离散的脉冲中,以及种群中新个体的季节性增加。因此,一个物种比另一个物种的成功取决于其在每个繁殖周期中纳入个体的繁殖能力。我们的模拟揭示了丰度模式受体型的影响,这表明捕食者体型的变化可以作为群落结构变化的关键指标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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