Group 7
Wiki site of the practical exercise of the VII Southern-Summer School on Mathematical Biology.
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Autotomy, or self-amputation, is an active form of defense from predators in which an animal sheds a body part when attacked. Despite sounding strange, it is performed by many species of reptiles, insects, arachnids and mollusks. In insects and arachnids, the amputated body part is usually a leg, so that even when the part cannot be regrown, it has some sort of backup (insects and arachnids have lots of legs, in case you didn’t recall).
Recently, however, a very unusual and unexpected kind of autotomy has been discovered in arachnids: some scorpions of the family Butidae may self-amputate their tails. This it surprising because the tail does not have a backup and cannot grow back, which means that the scorpions discard their main weapon. But there is more: the “tail” of the scorpion is actually the end of its abdomen, and by losing it the scorpion loses its anus! And yes, this does generate the sort of problem you are thinking about right now. Nevertheless, tailess scorpions can endure for months and can even reproduce.
Propose and analyze a mathematical model that can describe the dynamics associated with the possible evading behaviors of scorpions. In particular, it is interesting to look for the the populational patterns generated by the self-amputation strategy. It may also be interesting to investigate the reasons why such behaviors can persist/spread in the population.
Evolutionary dynamics: can you modify your model to produce evolutionary predictions? For instance, what are the factors that make autotomy a strategy that can persist in a population? Also, assuming the scorpions’ tendency to autotomize its tail is heritable, what should influence its mean value in the population? <wrap tip>Tip:</wrap> one way of thinking about natural selection is in terms of competition among individuals carrying different genes. After all, natural selection has been described as a struggle for existence by someone important.