How Species Interact: Altering the Standard View on Trophic Ecology

Author:   Roger Arditi (, professor at the French National Institute for Agronomic Research) ,  Lev Ginzburg (, professor of ecology and evolution at Stony Brook University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780199913831


Pages:   192
Publication Date:   31 May 2012
Format:   Hardback
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How Species Interact: Altering the Standard View on Trophic Ecology


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Overview

"Understanding the functioning of ecosystems requires the understanding of the interactions between consumer species and their resources. How do these interactions affect the variations of population abundances? How do population abundances determine the impact of predators on their prey? The view defended in this book is that the ""null model"" that most ecologists tend to use is inappropriate because it assumes that the amount of prey consumed by each predator is insensitive to the number of conspecifics. The authors argue that the amount of prey available per predator, rather than the absolute abundance of prey, is the basic determinant of the dynamics of predation. This so-called ratio dependence is shown to be a much more reasonable ""null model."""

Full Product Details

Author:   Roger Arditi (, professor at the French National Institute for Agronomic Research) ,  Lev Ginzburg (, professor of ecology and evolution at Stony Brook University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 23.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 15.50cm
Weight:   0.408kg
ISBN:  

9780199913831


ISBN 10:   0199913838
Pages:   192
Publication Date:   31 May 2012
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

Table of Contents

"Preface 1. Alternative theories of trophic interaction 1.1 Monod vs. Contois: resource-dependent and ratio-dependent bacteria 1.2 The standard predator-prey model of ecology 1.3 The Arditi-Ginzburg ratio-dependent model 1.4 Donor control and ratio dependence 1.5 Predator-dependent models 1.6 What happens at low consumer density? The gradual interference hypothesis 1.7 Biomass conversion 2. Direct measurements of the functional response 2.1 Insect predators and parasitoids, snails, fish, and others: laboratory measurements 2.1.1 Manipulating the consumer density alone 2.1.2 Measuring interference in the presence of a saturating functional response 2.1.3 The Arditi-Akçakaya predator-dependent model 2.1.4 Application to literature data 2.1.5 Does interference increase gradually? 2.2 Wasps and chrysomelids: a field experiment 2.3 Wolves and moose: field observations 2.3.1 Wolf social structure and spatial scales 2.3.2 Model fitting and model selection methods 2.3.3 The wolf-moose functional response is ratio-dependent 2.4 Additional direct tests of ratio dependence 2.4.1 Bark beetles 2.4.2 Shrimps 2.4.3 Egg parasitoids 2.4.4 Benthic flatworms 2.5 Identifying the functional response in time series 3. Indirect evidence: food chain equilibria 3.1 Cascading responses to harvesting at the top of the food chain 3.2 Enrichment response when the number of trophic levels is fixed 3.3 Enrichment response when the number of trophic levels increases with enrichment 3.4 The paradox of enrichment 3.5 Donor control and stability of food webs 3.6 Why the world is green 4. How gradual interference and ratio dependence emerge 4.1 Experimental evidence of the role of predator clustering 4.1.1 A microcosm experiment with cladocerans 4.1.2 Predator aggregations lead to ratio dependence 4.2 Refuges and donor control 4.2.1 A simple exploratory theoretical model 4.2.2 From donor control to ratio dependence 4.3 The role of directed movements in the formation of population spatial structures 4.3.1 Self-organization due to accelerated movement 4.3.2 Spatially-structured predator-prey systems 4.3.3 Generalization 4.4 Ratio dependence and biological control 4.4.1 The biological control paradox 4.4.2 Trophotaxis and biological control 4.5 Emergence of gradual interference: an individual-based approach 4.5.1 A qualitative model based on predator home ranges 4.5.2 An individual-based model based on trophotaxis 5. The ratio dependence controversy 5.1 How interference estimates can be wrong 5.2 The paradox of enrichment and the cascading enrichment response: Is there any evidence that they exist? 5.3 The fallacy of instantism 5.4 Are population cycles really caused by predation? 5.5 Mechanistic vs. phenomenological theories 5.6 ""The truth is always in the middle"": How much truth is in this statement? 6. It must be beautiful 6.1 Scale invariance and symmetries 6.2 Kolmogorov's insight 6.3 Akçakaya's ratio-dependent model for lynx-hare cycling 6.4 The ""limit myth"" Appendices 3.A Food chain responses to increased primary production 3.A.1 Prey-dependent four-level food chain 3.A.2 Ratio-dependent three-level food chain 3.B Cascading response in the ratio-dependent model 6.A How a revised ecology textbook could look References"

Reviews

Roger Arditi and Lev Ginzburg, who have already done much to broaden thinking about the functional response in ecology, present a tightly reasoned argument for the centrality of ratio dependence, by bringing together empirical evidence, mathematics, and the logic of emergent dynamics at time and spatial scales relevant to population change. Their book is essential reading for ecologists concerned with fundamental issues of population interaction. Donald L. DeAngelis, University of Miami This book is a valuable and timely contribution to ecological theory. The authors provide a personal perspective on the quantitative dimensions of trophic interactions based on empirical studies, detailed mechanistic models of predation, and more general philosophical considerations of symmetry and simplicity in science. Robert D. Holt, Arthur R. Marshall, Jr., Chair in Ecology, University of Florida A scholarly and insightful monograph expanding the framework for the theory of predator-prey interactions. Integrating theoretical work and empirical analyses, this definitive reference on ratio-dependent models should be read by anyone interested in the dynamics of interacting species. Simon Levin, Moffett Professor of Biology, Princeton University The entire book is well-organized and very clearly written; it has a comprehensive index. Arditi and Ginzburg make it clear from the onset that the focus of the book lies on their own work. Given their quite comprehensive work, they still cover a lot of ground with this approach.


Roger Arditi and Lev Ginzburg, who have already done much to broaden thinking about the functional response in ecology, present a tightly reasoned argument for the centrality of ratio dependence, by bringing together empirical evidence, mathematics, and the logic of emergent dynamics at time and spatial scales relevant to population change. Their book is essential reading for ecologists concerned with fundamental issues of population interaction. Donald L. DeAngelis, University of Miami This book is a valuable and timely contribution to ecological theory. The authors provide a personal perspective on the quantitative dimensions of trophic interactions based on empirical studies, detailed mechanistic models of predation, and more general philosophical considerations of symmetry and simplicity in science. Robert D. Holt, Arthur R. Marshall, Jr., Chair in Ecology, University of Florida A scholarly and insightful monograph expanding the framework for the theory of predator-prey interactions. Integrating theoretical work and empirical analyses, this definitive reference on ratio-dependent models should be read by anyone interested in the dynamics of interacting species. Simon Levin, Moffett Professor of Biology, Princeton University


Author Information

Roger Arditi is a distinguished professor at AgroParisTech in Paris, France. He works for INRA, the French National Institute for Agricultural Research, in the research unit of Ecology and Evolution at University Pierre et Marie Curie. His theoretical and experimental work is focused to basic questions of predation dynamics and applied work addresses agroecological problems. Lev R. Ginzburg has been a professor of ecology and evolution at Stony Brook University since 1977. He has published widely on theoretical and applied ecology, population genetics, and risk analysis. Ginzburg is co-author, with Mark Colyvan, of the popular title Ecological Orbits: How Planets Move and Populations Grow, published by Oxford University Press in 2004.

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