Title of article
Adaptive foraging does not always lead to more complex food webs
Author/Authors
Berec، نويسنده , , Lud?k and Eisner، نويسنده , , Jan and K?ivan، نويسنده , , Vlastimil، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
8
From page
211
To page
218
Abstract
Recent modeling studies exploring the effect of consumers’ adaptivity in diet composition on food web complexity invariably suggest that adaptivity in foraging decisions of consumers makes food webs more complex. That is, it allows for survival of a higher number of species when compared with non-adaptive food webs. Population-dynamical models in these studies share two features: parameters are chosen uniformly for all species, i.e. they are species-independent, and adaptive foraging is described by the search image model. In this article, we relax both these assumptions. Specifically, we allow parameters to vary among the species and consider the diet choice model as an alternative model of adaptive foraging. Our analysis leads to three important predictions. First, for species-independent parameter values for which the search image model demonstrates a significant effect of adaptive foraging on food web complexity, the diet choice model produces no such effect. Second, the effect of adaptive foraging through the search image model attenuates when parameter values cease to be species-independent. Finally, for the diet choice model we observe no (significant) effect of adaptive foraging on food web complexity. All these observations suggest that adaptive foraging does not always lead to more complex food webs. As a corollary, future studies of food web dynamics should pay careful attention to the choice of type of adaptive foraging model as well as of parameter values.
Keywords
Search image , replicator dynamics , Diet choice , Population dynamics , Niche model
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
Journal of Theoretical Biology
Record number
1540294
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