Title: Chapter 18: Dynamics of Predation
1Chapter 18 Dynamics of Predation
- Robert E. Ricklefs
- The Economy of Nature, Fifth Edition
2Population Cycles of Canadian Hare and Lynx
- Charles Eltons seminal paper focused on
fluctuations of mammals in the Canadian boreal
forests. - Eltons analyses were based on trapping records
maintained by the Hudsons Bay Company - of special interest in these records are the
regular and closely linked fluctuations in
populations of the lynx and its principal prey,
the snowshoe hare - What causes these cycles?
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4Some Fundamental Questions
- The basic question of population biology is
- what factors influence the size and stability of
populations? - Because most species are both consumers and
resources for other consumers, this basic
question may be refocused - are populations limited primarily by what they
eat or by what eats them?
5More Questions
- Do predators reduce the size of prey populations
substantially below the carrying capacity set by
resources for the prey? - this question is prompted by interests in
management of crop pests, game populations, and
endangered species - Do the dynamics of predator-prey interactions
cause populations to oscillate? - this question is prompted by observations of
predator-prey cycles in nature, such as Eltons
lynx and hare
6Consumers can limit resource populations.
- An example populations of cyclamen mites, a pest
of strawberry crops in California, can be
regulated by a predatory mite - cyclamen mites typically invade strawberry crops
soon after planting and build to damaging levels
in the second year - predatory mites invade these fields in the second
year and keep cyclamen mites in check - Experimental plots in which predatory mites were
controlled by pesticide had cyclamen mite
populations 25 times larger than untreated plots.
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8What makes an effective predator?
- Predatory mites control populations of cyclamen
mites in strawberry plantings because, like other
effective predators - they have a high reproductive capacity relative
to that of their prey - they have excellent dispersal powers
- they can switch to alternate food resources when
their primary prey are unavailable
9Consumer Control in Aquatic Ecosystems
- An example sea urchins exert strong control on
populations of algae in rocky shore communities - in urchin removal experiments, the biomass of
algae quickly increases - in the absence of predation, the composition of
the algal community also shifts - large brown algae replace coralline and small
green algae that can persist in the presence of
predation
10Predator and prey populations often cycle.
- Population cycles observed in Canada are present
in many species - large herbivores (snowshoe hares, muskrat, ruffed
grouse, ptarmigan) have cycles of 9-10 years - predators of these species (red foxes, lynx,
marten, mink, goshawks, owls) have similar cycles - small herbivores (voles and lemmings) have cycles
of 4 years - predators of these species (arctic foxes,
rough-legged hawks, snowy owls) also have similar
cycles - cycles are longer in forest, shorter in tundra
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14Predator-Prey Cycles A Simple Explanation
- Population cycles of predators lag slightly
behind population cycles of their prey - predators eat prey and reduce their numbers
- predators go hungry and their numbers drop
- with fewer predators, the remaining prey survive
better and prey numbers build - with increasing numbers of prey, the predator
populations also build, completing the cycle
15Time Lags in Predator-Prey Systems
- Delays in responses of births and deaths to an
environmental change produce population cycles - predator-prey interactions have time lags
associated with the time required to produce
offspring - 4-year and 9- or 10-year cycles in Canadian
tundra or forests suggest that time lags should
be 1 or 2 years, respectively - these could be typical lengths of time between
birth and sexual maturity - the influence of conditions in one year might not
be felt until young born in that year are old
enough to reproduce
16Time Lags in Pathogen-Host Systems
- Immune responses can create cycles of infection
in certain diseases - measles produced epidemics with a 2-year cycle in
pre-vaccine human populations - two years were required for a sufficiently large
population of newly susceptible infants to
accumulate
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18Time Lags in Pathogen-Host Systems
- other pathogens cycle because they kill
sufficient hosts to reduce host density below the
level where the pathogens can spread in the
population - such cycling is evident in polyhedrosis virus in
tent caterpillars - In many regions, tent caterpillar infestations
last about 2 years before the virus brings its
host population under control - In other regions, infestations may last up to 9
years - Forest fragmentation which creates abundant
forest edge tends to prolong outbreaks of the
tent caterpillar - Why?
- Increased forest edge exposes caterpillars to
more intense sunlight ? inactivates the virus ?
thus, habitat manipulation here has secondary
effects
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22Laboratory Investigations of Predators and Prey
- G.F. Gause conducted simple test-tube experiments
with Paramecium (prey) and Didinium (predator) - in plain test tubes containing nutritive medium,
the predator devoured all prey, then went extinct
itself - in tubes with a glass wool refuge, some prey
escaped predation, and the prey population
reexpanded after the predator went extinct - Gause could maintain predator-prey cycles in such
tubes by periodically adding more predators
23Predator-prey interactions can be modeled by
simple equations.
- Lotka and Volterra independently developed models
of predator-prey interactions in the 1920s - dR/dt rR - cRP
- describes the rate of increase of the prey
population, where - R is the number of prey
- P is the number of predators
- r is the preys per capita exponential growth
rate - c is a constant expressing efficiency of
predation
24Lotka-Volterra Predator-Prey Equations
- A second equation
- dP/dt acRP - dP
- describes the rate of increase of the predator
population, where - P is the number of predators
- R is the number of prey
- a is the efficiency of conversion of food to
growth - c is a constant expressing efficiency of
predation - d is a constant related to the death rate of
predators
25Predictions of Lotka-Volterra Models
- Predators and prey both have equilibrium
conditions (equilibrium isoclines or zero growth
isoclines) - P r/c for the predator
- R d/ac for the prey
- when these values are graphed, there is a single
joint equilibrium point where population sizes of
predator and prey are stable - when populations stray from joint equilibrium,
they cycle with period T 2? / ?rd
26Cycling in Lotka-Volterra Equations
- A graph with axes representing sizes of the
predator and prey populations illustrates the
cyclic predictions of Lotka-Volterra
predator-prey equations - a population trajectory describes the joint
cyclic changes of P and R counterclockwise
through the P versus R graph
27Factors Changing Equilibrium Isoclines
- The prey isocline increases if
- r increases or c decreases, or both
- the prey population would be able to support the
burden of a larger predator population - The predator isocline increases if
- d increases and either a or c decreases
- more prey would be required to support the
predator population
28Other Lotka-Volterra Predictions
- Increasing the predation efficiency (c) alone in
the model reduces isoclines for predators and
prey - fewer prey would be needed to sustain a given
capture rate - the prey population would be less able to support
the more efficient predator - Increasing the birth rate of the prey (r) should
lead to an increase in the population of
predators but not the prey themselves.
29Modification of Lotka-Volterra Models for
Predators and Prey
- There are various concerns with the
Lotka-Volterra equations - the lack of any forces tending to restore the
populations to the joint equilibrium - this condition is referred to as a neutral
equilibrium - the lack of any satiation of predators
- each predator consumes a constant proportion of
the prey population regardless of its density
30The Functional Response
- A more realistic description of predator behavior
incorporates alternative functional responses,
proposed by C.S. Holling - type I response rate of consumption per predator
is proportional to prey density (no satiation) - type II response number of prey consumed per
predator increases rapidly, then plateaus with
increasing prey density - type III response like type II, except predator
response to prey is depressed at low prey density
31The Holling Type III Response
- What would cause the type III functional
response? - heterogeneous habitat, which provides a limited
number of safe hiding places for prey - lack of reinforcement of learned searching
behavior due to a low rate of prey encounter - switching by predator to alternative food sources
when prey density is low
32The Numerical Response
- If individual predators exhibit satiation (type
II or III functional responses), continued
predator response to prey must come from - increase in predator population through local
population growth or immigration from elsewhere - this increase is referred to as a numerical
response
33Several factors reduce predator-prey oscillations.
- All of the following tend to stabilize predator
and prey numbers (in the sense of maintaining
nonvarying equilibrium population sizes) - predator inefficiency
- density-dependent limitation of either predator
or prey by external factors - alternative food sources for the predator
- refuges from predation at low prey densities
- reduced time delays in predator responses to
changes in prey abundance
34Destabilizing Influences
- The presence of predator-prey cycles indicates
destabilizing influences - such influences are typically time delays in
predator-prey interactions - developmental period
- time required for numerical responses by
predators - time course for immune responses in animals and
induced defenses in plants - when destabilizing influences outweigh
stabilizing ones, population cycles may arise
35Predator-prey systems can have more than one
stable state.
- Prey are limited both by their food supply and
the effects of predators - some populations may have two or more stable
equilibrium points, or multiple stable states - such a situation arises when
- prey exhibits a typical pattern of
density-dependence (reduced growth as carrying
capacity is reached) - predator exhibits a type III functional response
36Three Equilibria
- The model of predator and prey responses to prey
density results in three stable or equilibrium
states - a stable point A (low prey density) where
- any increase in prey population is more than
offset by increasingly efficient prey capture by
predator - an unstable point B (intermediate prey density)
where - control of prey shifts from predation to resource
limitation - a stable point C where
- prey escapes control by predator and is regulated
near its carrying capacity by resource scarcity
37Implications of Multiple Stable States
- Predators may control prey at a low level (point
A in model), but can lose the potential to
regulate prey at this level if prey density
increases above point B in the model - a predator controlling an agricultural pest can
lose control of that pest if the predator is
suppressed by another factors for a time - once the pest population exceeds point B, it will
increase to a high level at point C, regardless
of predator activity - at this point, pest population will remain high
until some other factor reduces the pest
population below point B in the model
38Effects of Different Levels of Predation
- Inefficient predators cannot maintain prey at low
levels (prey primarily limited by resources). - Increased predator efficiency adds a second
stable point at low prey density. - Further increases in predator functional and
numerical responses may eliminate a stable point
at high prey density - Intense predation at all prey levels can drive
the prey to extinction
39When can predators drive prey to extinction?
- It is clearly possible for predators to drive
their prey to extinction when - predators and prey are maintained in simple
laboratory systems - predators are maintained at high density by
availability of alternative, less preferred prey - biological control may be enhanced by providing
alternative prey to parasites and predators
40What equilibria are likely?
- Models of predator and prey suggest that
- prey are more likely to be held at relatively low
or relatively high equilibria (or perhaps both) - equilibria at intermediate prey densities are
highly unlikely
41Summary 1
- Predators can, in some cases, reduce prey
populations far below their carrying capacities. - Predators and prey often exhibit regular cycles,
typically with cycle lengths of 4 years or 9-10
years. - Lotka and Volterra proposed simple mathematical
models of predator and prey that predicted
population cycles.
42Summary 2
- Increased productivity of the prey should
increase the predators population but not the
preys. - Functional responses describe the relationship
between the rate at which an individual predator
consumes prey and the density of prey. - The Lotka-Volterra models incorporate a type I
functional response, which is inherently
unstable. - Type III functional responses can result in
stable regulation of prey populations at low
densities.
43Summary 3
- Type III functional responses can result from
switching. - Numerical responses describe responses of
predators to prey density through local
population growth and immigration. - Several factors tend to stabilize predator-prey
interactions, but time lags tend to destabilize
them. - Predator-prey systems may have multiple stable
points.