We are interested in the impact of natural selection in a prey-predator community. We introduce an individual-based model of the community that takes into account both prey and predator phenotypes. Our aim is to understand the phenotypic coevolution of prey and predators. The community evolves as a multi-type birth and death process with mutations. We first consider the infinite particle approximation of the process without mutation. In this limit, the process can be approximated by a system of differential equations. We prove the existence of a unique globally asymptotically stable equilibrium under specific conditions on the interaction among prey individuals. When mutations are rare, the community evolves on the mutational scale according to a Markovian jump process. This process describes the successive equilibria of the prey-predator community and extends the polymorphic evolutionary sequence to a coevolutionary framework. We then assume that mutations have a small impact on phenotypes and consider the evolution of monomorphic prey and predator populations. The limit of small mutation steps leads to a system of two differential equations which is a version of the canonical equation of adaptive dynamics for the prey-predator coevolution. We illustrate these different limits with an example of prey-predator community that takes into account different prey defense mechanisms. We observe through simulations how these various prey strategies impact the community.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00285-015-0895-y | DOI Listing |
ISME J
January 2024
Institute of Science and Technology, Niigata University, Nishi-ku, Niigata 950-2181, Japan.
The plant-microbe interactions, which is crucial for plant health and productivity, mainly occur in rhizosphere: a narrow zone of soil surrounding roots of living plants. The rhizosphere hosts one of the most intense habitats for microbial prey-predator interactions, especially between predatory protists and bacteria. Here, based on two key facts, microbial predators modulate rhizobacterial community composition, and the rhizobacterial community is the primary source of root microbiome, endophytes; we hypothesized that predation upon rhizobacteria would modulate the community composition of endophytic bacteria.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Theor Biol
December 2024
IRD, Sorbonne Université, Unité de Modélisation Mathématique et Informatique des Systèmes Complexes, UMMISCO, F-93143, Bondy, France.
In this study, we examine the effects of connectivity on the total catch of a fishery consisting of two fishing sites when the fish population is a predator of a larger prey-predator system. To this end, we analyze a prey-predator fish community model in a two-site environment and compute catch at Maximum Sustainable Yield (MSY). We exhibit some emergence phenomenon: the total catch can be greater than the sum of the catch at two isolated sites due to connectivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
November 2024
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Nagaoka University of Technology, 1603-1 Kamitomioka, Nagaoka, 940-2188, Japan. Electronic address:
In a membrane bioreactor (MBR) system, in situ sludge reduction techniques induce membrane fouling. To address this challenge, we incorporated a rotating mesh carrier, which can adsorb organic matter and provide a habitat for metazoans, into the anoxic tank of a conventional anoxic/oxic-MBR (A/O-MBR) system, termed rotating biological contactor-MBR (RBC-MBR), and evaluated treatment performance. Over 151 days, lab-scale RBC-MBR and A/O-MBR were used to treat municipal sewage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
August 2024
Department of Animal Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO-KNAW), Wageningen, the Netherlands.
The use of artificial light at night (ALAN) has increased drastically worldwide over the last decades. ALAN can have major effects on nocturnal communities, including insects and bats. Insects are attracted to street lights and few bat species take advantage of this by foraging on the attracted insects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
February 2024
Department of Mathematics, University of Kalyani, Kalyani 741235, India.
In this article we contemplate the dynamics of an additional food-provided prey-predator system. We assume that the behavior of cooperative predators induces fear in prey, which radically affects the prey's birth and death rates. We observe that the structural instability imposed by strong cooperative hunting among predators goes away with higher intensities of fear levels affecting the prey's reproductive output and mortality.
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