4.7 Article

Geographic variation in North American gypsy moth cycles: subharmonics, generalist predators, and spatial coupling

期刊

ECOLOGY
卷 91, 期 1, 页码 106-118

出版社

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1890/08-1246.1

关键词

Allee effect; gypsy moth; Lymantria dispar; nonparametric spatial covariance function; Northeastern United States; space time defoliation data; spatiotemporal dynamics; virus-insect interactions

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资金

  1. National Research Initiative of the USDA Cooperative State Research, Education and Extension Service

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Many defoliating forest lepidopterans, cause predictable periodic deforestation. Several of these species exhibit geographical variation in both the strength of periodic behavior and the frequency of cycles. The mathematical models used to describe the population dynamics of such species commonly predict that gradual variation in the underlying ecological mechanisms may lead to punctuated (subharmonic) variation in outbreak cycles through period-doubling cascades. Gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar, in its recently established range in the northeastern United States may represent an unusually clear natural manifestation of this phenomenon. In this Study we introduce a new statistical spatial-smoothing method for estimating outbreak periodicity from space-time defoliation data collected with spatial error. The method statistically confirms the existence of subharmonic variation in cyclicity among different forest types. Sortie xeric forest types exhibit a statistical 4-5 year period in outbreak dynamics, sortie mesic forest types a 9-10 year period, and sortie intermediate forest types a dominant 9-10 year period with it 4-5 year subdominant superharmonic. We then use a theoretical model involving gypsy moth, pathogens. and predators to investigate the possible role of geographical variation in generalist predator populations as the cause of this variation in dynamics. The model predicts that the period of gypsy moth oscillations should be positively associated with predator carrying capacity and that variation in the carrying capacity provides a parsimonious explanation of previous reports of geographical variation in gypsy Moth periodicity. Furthermore. a two-patch spatial extension of the model shows that, in the presence of spatial coupling, subharmonic attractors can coexist whereas nonharmonic attractors (i.e., where the cycle lengths are not integer multiples of one another) cannot.

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