• Title of article

    Consequences of asymmetric competition between resident and invasive defoliators: A novel empirically based modelling approach

  • Author/Authors

    Ammunét، نويسنده , , Tea and Klemola، نويسنده , , Tero and Parvinen، نويسنده , , Kalle، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    دوماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    107
  • To page
    117
  • Abstract
    Invasive species can have profound effects on a resident community via indirect interactions among community members. While long periodic cycles in population dynamics can make the experimental observation of the indirect effects difficult, modelling the possible effects on an evolutionary time scale may provide the much needed information on the potential threats of the invasive species on the ecosystem. Using empirical data from a recent invasion in northernmost Fennoscandia, we applied adaptive dynamics theory and modelled the long term consequences of the invasion by the winter moth into the resident community. Specifically, we investigated the outcome of the observed short-term asymmetric preferences of generalist predators and specialist parasitoids on the long term population dynamics of the invasive winter moth and resident autumnal moth sharing these natural enemies. Our results indicate that coexistence after the invasion is possible. However, the outcome of the indirect interaction on the population dynamics of the moth species was variable and the dynamics might not be persistent on an evolutionary time scale. In addition, the indirect interactions between the two moth species via shared natural enemies were able to cause asynchrony in the population cycles corresponding to field observations from previous sympatric outbreak areas. Therefore, the invasion may cause drastic changes in the resident community, for example by prolonging outbreak periods of birch-feeding moths, increasing the average population densities of the moths or, alternatively, leading to extinction of the resident moth species or to equilibrium densities of the two, formerly cyclic, herbivores.
  • Keywords
    Branching–extinction cycle , Population cycles , predation , Adaptive dynamics , Parasitism
  • Journal title
    Theoretical Population Biology
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Theoretical Population Biology
  • Record number

    1567823