From individual behaviour to population models: a case study using swimming algae |
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Authors: | Bearon R N Grünbaum D |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Mathematical Sciences, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 7ZL, UK b School of Oceanography, Box 357940, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195-7940, USA |
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Abstract: | Trajectories of swimming algae are analysed, and two random-walk models developed to link the individual-level behaviour of cells to population-level advection-diffusion models for the spatial-temporal distribution of cells. The models are both of the advection-diffusion form but are based on two different sets of assumptions about the underlying random-walk behaviours, a velocity jump behaviour and a velocity diffusion behaviour. The mathematical models were developed to allow for an arbitrary (non-weak) bias in the random walk and a variable swimming speed in order to represent the experimental data. For the algal species considered, Heterosigma akashiwo, the mean upward swimming speed was computed as , and the calculated diffusion constants ranged from 2×103 to depending on the details of the models. That two widely used modelling approaches yield substantially different population-level predictions when applied to the same empirical data suggests that better theoretical tools are needed for identifying adequate approximations for behavioural characteristics. |
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Keywords: | Random walks Micro-organisms Collective motion Diffusion Heterosigma akashiwo |
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