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Population Dynamics and Mutualism: Functional Responses of Benefits and Costs. J. Nathaniel Holland, Donald L. DeAngelis, Judith L. Bronstein. Presented by Kate Buenau. Generalizations for Mutualism. Benefits—can’t be obtained in absence of partner: nutrients, transport, protection
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Population Dynamics and Mutualism:Functional Responses of Benefits and Costs J. Nathaniel Holland, Donald L. DeAngelis, Judith L. Bronstein Presented by Kate Buenau
Generalizations for Mutualism • Benefits—can’t be obtained in absence of partner: nutrients, transport, protection • Costs—investments in attracting mutualists, substances to reward them, energy and time to obtain rewards • Both affect reproduction and survival • Benefits and costs tend to be density dependent • Positive feedback between mutualists • Negative feedback needed for stability
The Goal • Develop functional responses in terms of benefits and costs as a function of the population of the mutualist partner • General model • Case study of senita cactus
Potential Functional Responses • Net Effect = Gross Benefit - Cost
Some Basic Models • General model: • Functional responses: linear: saturating: unimodal:
Senita Cacti and Moths • Flowers must be pollinated by moths • Moths lay eggs in flowers • Not all flowers have fruit, and moth larvae eats some immature fruit • Fruit with larvae cannot produce seeds • Fruit may abort, and eggs and larvae die (negative feedback)
The Model • Benefits and costs to cacti depends upon abundance of moths compared to flower production (M/FP) …unimodal net effect • Benefit: Flowers are pollinated with a saturating function, using a Poisson searching process
Building the equation II… • Costs (larval infestation) also saturate • (1-a) represents fraction of flowers potentially setting fruit • = fraction of fruit cacti
The Other Side… • Moth benefits: number of flowers effectively oviposited • Costs: fruit abortion (-a)
Variation Correlates pollination and oviposition Less likelihood of extinction