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The spatial dynamics of ecosystem engineers

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Author(s):
Caroline Franco
Total Authors: 1
Document type: Master's Dissertation
Press: São Carlos.
Institution: Universidade de São Paulo (USP). Instituto de Física de São Carlos (IFSC/BT)
Defense date:
Examining board members:
Jose Fernando Fontanari; Paulo Fernando de Arruda Mancera; Hyun Mo Yang
Advisor: Jose Fernando Fontanari
Abstract

Ecosystem engineering refers to the ability of certain organisms to actively modify their surrounding environment. In an ecological context, ecosystem engineers are keystone species that modify or create habitats via mechanical means or by using their own physical structures. By creating new niches, beavers, coral reefs and primitive human societies would guarantee both their and other species survival in a shared ecosystem. Due to its long-lasting character, some of this changes might outlive the engineers populations, leading to evolutionary consequences. The theoretical study of such ecological phenomena is relatively recent when compared to the description of predator-prey or competition interactions. Only in 1996 Gurney & Lawton introduced a model to describe the population dynamics of ecosystem engineers, yet since then few modifications appeared. Here we build on this model by allowing the engineers to move diffusively through the patches of a coupled map lattice, a framework discrete both in time and space. The local stability analysis reveals the existence of stable, cyclic and chaotic regimes, with period-doubling bifurcations leading to chaotic orbits. We find that only for large intrinsic growth rates, where chaotic behavior occurs, dispersal influences the metapopulation dynamics. In this regime, chaos is suppressed and extinction can be avoided. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 15/21452-2 - Spatial Dynamics of Ecosystem Engineers: a coupled map approach
Grantee:Caroline Franco
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Master