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An “Experimental” Interdisciplinary Course in Mathematical Ecology *. Glenn Ledder † and Brigitte Tenhumberg ‡† † Department of Mathematics ‡ School of Biological Sciences University of Nebraska-Lincoln gledder@math.unl.edu *funded by NSF grant DUE 0531920. DESIGN Goal Design Issues
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An“Experimental”Interdisciplinary Course in Mathematical Ecology* Glenn Ledder† and Brigitte Tenhumberg‡† †Department of Mathematics ‡School ofBiological Sciences University of Nebraska-Lincoln gledder@math.unl.edu *funded by NSF grant DUE 0531920
DESIGN Goal Design Issues Pedagogical Principles The Research Topic IMPLEMENTATION Laboratory Activities “Lecture” Activities A Virtual Laboratory Results Overview
Goals • Project Goal: Prepare a cadre of young scientists who can do interdisciplinary research in mathematics/biology • Course Goal: Introduce interdisciplinary research in mathematics/biology to talented students at an early stage in their careers.
Design Issues • The course must be self-contained. • We cannot assume knowledge of calculus, statistics, or any specific biology topic. • We cannot assume laboratory experience.
Design Issues • The course must be self-contained. • We cannot assume knowledge of calculus, statistics, or any specific biology topic. • We cannot assume laboratory experience. • The course must be integrated at different levels. • Math and biology • Theory and experiment • Research design, conduct, and dissemination
Pedagogical Principles • The experiments must all contribute to a coherent body of theory. • The math must always be motivated by the experiments. • Background material must be presented when needed. • Students must be asked to assemble the pieces into an integrated whole.
The Research Topic • General Theme: biological pest control
The Research Topic • General Theme: biological pest control • Specific Research Questions: • How does an aphid population grow? • The theory must incorporate the aphid life cycle. • The theory must be formulated as a mathematical model. • The theory must be quantitatively realistic.
The Research Topic • General Theme: biological pest control • Specific Research Questions: • How does an aphid population grow? • The theory must incorporate the aphid life cycle. • The theory must be formulated as a mathematical model. • The theory must be quantitatively realistic. • How does predation by lady beetles affect aphid populations? • The theory must be formulated as a mathematical model.
The Greenbug Aphid: S. graminum • Many greenbug colonies consist of viviparous (born live) females that reproduce asexually. Sexual reproduction occurs only when conditions require overwintering.
The Greenbug Aphid: S. graminum • Many greenbug colonies consist of viviparous (born live) females that reproduce asexually. Sexual reproduction occurs only when conditions require overwintering. • Greenbugs have 5 developmental stages: 4 instars of juveniles plus adult.
The Greenbug Aphid: S. graminum • Many greenbug colonies consist of viviparous (born live) females that reproduce asexually. Sexual reproduction occurs only when conditions require overwintering. • Greenbugs have 5 developmental stages: 4 instars of juveniles plus adult. • Plant damage results from toxic saliva rather than loss of nutrients. Severe crop damage occurs before the aphids become short of food. (we can ignore density effects)
Theoretical Population Dynamics • Discrete linear stage-structured model: xt+1 = Mxt,wherexis a vector giving the populations of the different stages and Mis a matrix of parameters
Theoretical Population Dynamics • Discrete linear stage-structured model: xt+1 = Mxt,wherexis a vector giving the populations of the different stages and Mis a matrix of parameters • Research tasks: • construct the model • estimate the parameters • predict population growth • test the predictions
Laboratory Activities • Clip-cage experiments: • Put 1 newborn aphid in a clip-cage on a live sorghum leaf. • Check its development stage daily by looking for exuvies. • After it becomes an adult, count its daily offspring. • Population growth experiments: • Put 1 adult aphid in a large cage with a sorghum plant. • Count the aphids each day.
“Lecture” Activities • Mathematical modeling • Develop model • Determine parameter values from clip-cage experiments • Run Matlab simulation with model • Compare simulation results with population growth experiment data
“Lecture” Activities • Mathematical modeling • Develop model • Determine parameter values from clip-cage experiments • Run Matlab simulation with model • Compare simulation results with population growth experiment data • Discovery of model behavior
“Lecture” Activities • Mathematical modeling • Develop model • Determine parameter values from clip-cage experiments • Run Matlab simulation with model • Compare simulation results with population growth experiment data • Discovery of model behavior • Model analysis • Find eigenvalues and eigenvectors • Determine growth rate and proportions
Teaching Modeling Skills • Modeling process: • Develop model • Determine parameter values • Run Matlab simulation • Check simulation results • Issues: • Data takes a long time to collect. • The real model is 5-dimensional.
Presenting Bugbox, a simple computer simulation for structured population dynamics! Because Bugbox is a simulation, its behavior doesn’t necessarily match any real insect population. It functions as a biology lab for a virtual world. Boxbugs are simpler than real insects: • They don’t move. • Development rate is chosen by the experimenter. • Each life stage has a distinctive appearance. larvapupaadult