p-127

(p-127)THEORETICAL STUDIES IN TRITROPHIC INTERACTIONS CONSISTING OF PLANTS, HERBIVORES AN CARNIVORES BY USING ARTIFICIAL LIFE MODEL

Yasuhiro Suzuki1, Junji Takabayashi2 and Hiroshi Tanaka1

1Medical Research Institute, Tokyo Medical and Dental University 1-5-45 Yushima, Bunkyo, Tokyo 113-0034, Japan.
2Laboratory of Ecological Information, Graduate School of Agriculture, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan.


Recently, a phenomenon that plants respond to herbivore feeding activity by producing volatiles that in turn attract carnivorous natural enemies of the herbivores has been reported in several tritrophic systems. These volatiles are not the mere result of mechanical damage, but are produced by the plant as a specific response to herbivore damage.We investigated the population dynamics of such tritrophic interactions using a method named Abstract Rewriting system of Multi-Sets (ARMS) [1] which is a new research method in Complex Systems and Artificial Life. In ARMS model, we regarded a tritrophic interaction mediated by herbivore-induced plant volatiles that attract carnivorous natural enemies of herbivores as chemical reactions of four reagents (plants, herbivores, carnivores and volatiles). The intensity of interactions between individuals corresponded to reaction speed in the ARMS model. We compared the case where plants produce herbivore-induced volatiles vs the case where they do not with the model. Further, by changing the reaction speed, we found that there was a case where herbivore-induced volatiles that attract carnivores resulted in the population increase of the herbivores. We will discuss several conditions in tritrophic interactions that differently affect the population density of plants, herbivores and carnivores based on the prediction by the ARMS model.
[1] Suzuki. Y and H. Tanaka, Symbolic Chemical System based on Abstract Rewriting System and its behavior pattern, J. Artif. Life and Robot., 1:211-219, Springer Verlag, 1997.


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