Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/1442
Title: Complex interaction of resource availability, life-history and demography determines the dynamics and stability of stage-structured populations
Authors: TUNG, SUDIPTA
Rajamani, M.
Joshi, Amitabh
DEY, SUTIRTH
Dept. of Biology
Keywords: Fluctuation index
Stability
Constancy
Persistence
Minimum critical size
Time-series
Stage-structured model
Sterile Insect Technique
TOC-DEC-2018
2019
Issue Date: Jan-2019
Publisher: Elsevier B.V.
Citation: Journal of Theoretical Biology, 460, 1-12.
Abstract: The dynamics of stage-structured populations facing stage-specific variability in resource availability and/or demographic factors like unequal sex-ratios, remains poorly understood. We addressed these issues using a stage-structured individual-based model that incorporates life-history parameters common to many holometabolous insects. The model was calibrated using time series data from a 49-generation experiment on laboratory populations of Drosophila melanogaster, subjected to four different combinations of larval and adult nutritional levels. The model was able to capture multiple qualitative and quantitative aspects of the empirical time series across three independent studies. We then simulated the model to explore the interaction of various life-history parameters and nutritional levels in determining population stability. In all nutritional regimes, constancy stability of the populations was reduced upon increasing egg-hatchability, critical mass, and proportion of body resource allocated to female fecundity. However, the effects of increasing sensitivity of female-fecundity to adult density on constancy stability varied across nutrition regimes. The effects of unequal sex-ratio and sex-specific culling were greatly influenced by fecundity but not by levels of juvenile nutrition. Finally, we investigated the implications of some of these insights on the efficiency of the widely-used pest control method, the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT). We show that increasing the amount of juvenile food had no effects on SIT efficiency when the density-independent fecundity is low, but reduces SIT efficiency when the density-independent fecundity is high.
URI: http://dr.iiserpune.ac.in:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/1442
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtbi.2018.10.019
ISSN: 0022-5193
1095-8541
Appears in Collections:JOURNAL ARTICLES

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