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<WRAP center round todo 60%> Option 1 below. Other options (ordered by difficulty) :

Plant defences limit herbivore population growth by changing predator–prey interactions. Kersch-Becker et al 2017. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 284: 20171120. http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/royprsb/284/1862/20171120.full.pdf

Exposure to the leaf litter microbiome of healthy adults protects seedlings from pathogen damage. Christian et al 2017. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 284: 20170641. http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/royprsb/284/1858/20170641.full.pdf

Zika virus activates de novo and cross-reactive memory B cell responses in dengue-experienced donors Rogers et al. 2017. Science Immunology. 2: eaan6809. http://immunology.sciencemag.org/content/2/14/eaan6809 </WRAP>

Group 8

Competition between brown bear and grey wolf

Wiki site of the practical exercise of the VII Southern-Summer School on Mathematical Biology.

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Introduction

Different apex predators may share the same resources in a giving environment. The grey wolf and the brown bear are predators of ungulates in North America and Europe. The authors evaluated a long dataset to understand how the presence of bears affects the kill rate of wolves. The time between consecutive kills made by wolves increased in bears’ presence in both sites. The authors suggest some mechanisms to explain this:

  1. bears reduce densities of neonate ungulates (i.e. exploitative competition)
  2. wolves delay by killing larger preys or feeding on usurped kills under bears' presence (i.e. interference competition + kleptoparasitism)

© Stan Tekiela

Assignment

Think about the balance of exploitative and interference competition between bears and wolves. Are there only negative effects of bears to wolves’ kills? Is it possible one competitor to have a positive effect on the other competitor? How bears can increase the feeding rate of wolves? Think about considering the handling time differences in the absence and presence of bears.

Extension

The authors suggest that the presence of both predators possibly impact prey less than the sum of their individual impacts. How does including prey's population dynamics explicitly can account for that effect? How the sympatric populations of predators affect differently from the predictions of the sum of allopatric populations?

Reference

Competition between apex predators? Brown bears decrease wolf kill rate on two continents. Tallian et al. 2017. Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 284: 20162368.http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/royprsb/284/1848/20162368.full.pdf

2018/groups/g8/start.1513652965.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/01/09 18:45 (external edit)