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Integrated modelling of insect population dynamics at two temporal scales

Dennis, Emily B. and Kéry, Marc and Morgan, Byron J. T. and Coray, Armin and Schaub, Michael and Baur, Bruno. (2021) Integrated modelling of insect population dynamics at two temporal scales. Ecological Modelling, 441. p. 109408.

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Official URL: https://edoc.unibas.ch/86925/

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Abstract

Population size of species with birth-pulse life-cycles varies both within and between seasons, but most population dynamics models assume that a population can be characterised adequately by a single number within a season. However, within-season dynamics can sometimes be too substantial to be ignored when modelling dynamics between seasons. Typical examples are insect populations or migratory animals. Numerous models for only between-season dynamics exist, but very few have combined dynamics at both temporal scales.
In a new approach, we extend appreciably the models of Dennis et al. (2016b): we show how to adapt them for a generation time > 1 year and fit an integrated population model for multiple data types, by maximising a joint likelihood for population counts of unmarked individuals and capture-recapture data from a study with marked individuals. We illustrate the approach using annual monitoring data for the endangered flightless beetle Iberodorcadion fuliginator from 18 populations in the Upper Rhine Valley for 1998-2016, with a 2-year life cycle. Standard likelihood methods are used for model fitting and comparison, and a concentrated (profile) likelihood approach provides computational efficiency.
Additional information from the capture-recapture data makes the population model more robust and, importantly, enables true, rather than relative, abundance to be estimated. A dynamic stopover model provides estimates of both survival and phenology parameters within a season, and also of productivity between seasons. For I. fuliginator, we demonstrate a population decline since 1998 and how this links with productivity, which is affected by temperature. A delayed mean emergence date in recent years is also shown.
A main point of interest is the focus on the two temporal scales at which perhaps most animal populations vary: in the short-term, a population is seldom truly closed within a single season, and in the long-term (between seasons) it never is. Hence our models may serve as a template for a general description of population dynamics in many species. This includes rare species with limited data sets, for which there is a general lack of population dynamic models, yet conservation actions may greatly benefit from this kind of models.
Faculties and Departments:05 Faculty of Science > Departement Umweltwissenschaften > Ehemalige Einheiten Umweltwissenschaften > Naturschutzbiologie (Baur)
UniBasel Contributors:Baur, Bruno
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
ISSN:0304-3800
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Identification Number:
Last Modified:17 Feb 2022 06:46
Deposited On:17 Feb 2022 06:46

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