• Title of article

    Emergence of ratio-dependent and predator-dependent functional responses for pollination mutualism and seed parasitism

  • Author/Authors

    DeAngelis، نويسنده , , Donald L. and Holland، نويسنده , , J. Nathaniel Holland، نويسنده ,

  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    551
  • To page
    556
  • Abstract
    Prey (N) dependence [g(N)], predator (P) dependence [g(P) or g(N,P)], and ratio dependence [f(P/N)] are often seen as contrasting forms of the predatorʹs functional response describing predator consumption rates on prey resources in predator–prey and parasitoid–host interactions. Analogously, prey-, predator-, and ratio-dependent functional responses are apparently alternative functional responses for other types of consumer–resource interactions. These include, for example, the fraction of flowers pollinated or seeds parasitized in pollination (pre-dispersal) seed-parasitism mutualisms, such as those between fig wasps and fig trees or yucca moths and yucca plants. Here we examine the appropriate functional responses for how the fraction of flowers pollinated and seeds parasitized vary with the density of pollinators (predator dependence) or the ratio of pollinator and flower densities (ratio dependence). We show that both types of functional responses can emerge from minor, but biologically important variations on a single model. An individual-based model was first used to describe plant–pollinator interactions. Conditional upon on whether the number of flowers visited by the pollinator was limited by factors other than search time (e.g., by the number of eggs it had to lay, if it was also a seed parasite), and on whether the pollinator could directly find flowers on a plant, or had to search, the simulation results lead to either a predator-dependent or a ratio-dependent functional response. An analytic model was then used to show mathematically how these two cases can arise.
  • Keywords
    Predator-dependent functional response , Ratio-dependent functional response , Pollination , Seed parasitism , Consumer–resource model , Individual-based model
  • Journal title
    Astroparticle Physics
  • Record number

    2039458