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Sea-urchin feeding fronts
Institution:1. Biological Sciences Department and Marine Research Institute, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch 7701 South Africa;2. Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Aquaculture Research, Private Bag X2, Roggebaai 8012 South Africa;1. Instituto de Biología de Organismos Marinos (IBIOMAR-CONICET), Blvd. Brown 2915, Puerto Madryn, Argentina;2. Centro para el Estudio de Sistemas Marinos (CESIMAR-CONICET), Blvd. Brown 2915, Puerto Madryn, Argentina;3. Centro de Investigación y Transferencia Tecnológica en Recursos Marinos “Almirante Storni” (CIMAS), Universidad Nacional del Comahue – CONICET – MAGyP Rio Negro, Güemes 1030, San Antonio Oeste, Argentina;4. Instituto Patagónico del Mar, Universidad Nacional de la Patagonia San Juan Bosco, Blvd. Brown 3051, Puerto Madryn, Argentina;1. Laboratory of Marine Plant Ecology, Graduate School of Agricultural Science, Tohoku University, 468-1 Aza-Aoba, Aramaki, Aoba, Sendai, Miyagi 980-0845, Japan;2. National Research Institute of Fisheries Science, Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency, 2-12-4 Fukuura, Kanazawa, Yokohama, Kanagawa 236-8648, Japan
Abstract:Sea-urchin feeding fronts are a striking example of spatial pattern formation in an ecological system. If it is assumed that urchins are asocial, and that they move randomly, then the formation of these dense fronts is an apparent paradox. The key lies in observations that urchins move further in areas where their algal food is less plentiful. This naturally leads to the accumulation of urchins in areas with abundant algae. If urchin movement is represented as a random walk, with a step size that depends on algal concentration, then their movement may be described by a Fokker–Planck diffusion equation. For certain combinations of algal growth and urchin grazing, traveling wave solutions are obtained. Two-dimensional simulations of urchin algal dynamics show that an initially uniformly distributed urchin population, grazing on an alga with a smoothly varying density, may form a propagating front separating two sharply delineated regions. On one side of the front algal density is uniformly low, and on the other side of the front algal density is uniformly high. Bounds on when stable fronts will form are obtained in terms of urchin density and grazing, and algal growth.
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