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The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska- Lincoln http://www.math.unl.edu/~gled der1 [email protected] Supported by NSF grant DUE 0536508

The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

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Page 1: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical

Modeling in Ecology

Glenn LedderUniversity of Nebraska-Lincoln

http://www.math.unl.edu/[email protected]

Supported by NSF grant DUE 0536508

Page 2: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Outline

1. Mathematical ModelingA. What is a mathematical model?B. The modeling process

2. A Resource Management ModelA. The general plan for the modelB. Details of growth and harvestingC. Analysis of the modelD. Application to whale populations

Page 3: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(1A) Mathematical Model

MathProblem

Input Data Output Data

Key Question:

What is the relationship between input and output data?

Page 4: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Rankings in Sports

MathematicalAlgorithm

Ranking

Game Data: determined by circumstances

Weight Factors: chosen by design

Game Data

Weight Factors

Page 5: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Rankings in Sports

MathematicalAlgorithm

RankingGame Data

Model Analysis: For a given set of game data, how does the ranking depend on the weight factors?

Weight Factors

Page 6: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Endangered Species

MathematicalModelControl

Parameters

Future Population

FixedParameters

Model Analysis: For a given set of fixed parameters, how does the future population depend on the control parameters?

Page 7: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Models and Modeling

A mathematical model is a mathematicalobject based on a real situation andcreated in the hope that its mathematicalbehavior resembles the real behavior.

Page 8: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Models and Modeling

A mathematical model is a mathematicalobject based on a real situation andcreated in the hope that its mathematicalbehavior resembles the real behavior.

Mathematical modeling is the art/science of creating, analyzing, validating, and interpreting mathematical models.

Page 9: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(1B) Mathematical Modeling

RealWorld

ConceptualModel

MathematicalModel

approximation derivation

analysisvalidation

Page 10: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(1B) Mathematical Modeling

RealWorld

ConceptualModel

MathematicalModel

approximation derivation

analysisvalidation

A mathematical model represents a simplified view of the real world.

Page 11: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(1B) Mathematical Modeling

RealWorld

ConceptualModel

MathematicalModel

approximation derivation

analysisvalidation

A mathematical model represents a simplified view of the real world.

Models should not be used without validation!

Page 12: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Example: Mars Rover

RealWorld

ConceptualModel

MathematicalModel

approximation derivation

analysisvalidation

• Conceptual Model:Newtonian physics

Page 13: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Example: Mars Rover

RealWorld

ConceptualModel

MathematicalModel

approximation derivation

analysisvalidation

• Conceptual Model:Newtonian physics

• Validation by many experiments

Page 14: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Example: Mars Rover

RealWorld

ConceptualModel

MathematicalModel

approximation derivation

analysisvalidation

• Conceptual Model:Newtonian physics

• Validation by many experiments• Result:

Safe landing

Page 15: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Example: Financial Markets

RealWorld

ConceptualModel

MathematicalModel

approximation derivation

analysisvalidation

• Conceptual Model:Financial and credit markets are independentFinancial institutions are all independent

Page 16: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Example: Financial Markets

RealWorld

ConceptualModel

MathematicalModel

approximation derivation

analysisvalidation

• Conceptual Model:Financial and credit markets are independentFinancial institutions are all independent

• Analysis:Isolated failures and acceptable risk

Page 17: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Example: Financial Markets

RealWorld

ConceptualModel

MathematicalModel

approximation derivation

analysisvalidation

• Conceptual Model:Financial and credit markets are independentFinancial institutions are all independent

• Analysis:Isolated failures and acceptable risk

• Validation??

Page 18: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Example: Financial Markets

RealWorld

ConceptualModel

MathematicalModel

approximation derivation

analysisvalidation

• Conceptual Model:Financial and credit markets are independentFinancial institutions are all independent

• Analysis:Isolated failures and acceptable risk

• Validation?? • Result: Oops!!

Page 19: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Forecasting the 2012 Election

Polls use conceptual models• What fraction of people in each age group vote?• Are cell phone users “different” from landline users?

and so on

Page 20: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Forecasting the 2012 Election

Polls use conceptual models• What fraction of people in each age group vote?• Are cell phone users “different” from landline users?

and so onhttp://www.fivethirtyeight.com (NY Times?)• Uses data from most polls• Corrects for prior pollster results• Corrects for errors in pollster conceptual models

Page 21: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Forecasting the 2012 Election

Polls use conceptual models• What fraction of people in each age group vote?• Are cell phone users “different” from landline users?

and so onhttp://www.fivethirtyeight.com (NY Times?)• Uses data from most polls• Corrects for prior pollster results• Corrects for errors in pollster conceptual models

Validation?? • Very accurate in 2008• Less accurate for 2012 primaries, but still pretty good

Page 22: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(2) Resource Management

• Why have natural resources, such as whales or bison, been depleted so quickly?

• How can we restore natural resources?

• How should we manage natural resources?

Page 23: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(2A) General Biological Resource Model

Let X be the biomass of resources.Let T be the time.Let C be the (fixed) number of consumers.Let F(X) be the resource growth rate.Let G(X) be the consumption per consumer.

)()( XGCXFdT

dX

Overall rate of increase = growth rate – consumption rate

Page 24: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

• Logistic growth– Fixed environment capacity

K

XRXXF 1)(

K

R

X

XF )(

Relative growth rate

(2B)

Page 25: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

• Holling type 3 consumption– Saturation and alternative resource

22

2

)(XA

QXXG

0 A 2A 3A 4A0

0.25Q

0.5Q

0.75Q

Q

X

G

Page 26: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

The Dimensional Model

22

2

1XA

QXC

K

XRX

dT

dX

Overall rate of increase = growth rate – consumption rate

Page 27: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

The Dimensional Model

22

2

1XA

QXC

K

XRX

dT

dX

Overall rate of increase = growth rate – consumption rate

This model has 4 parameters—a lot for analysis!

Nondimensionalization reduces the number of parameters.

Page 28: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

The Dimensional Model

22

2

1XA

QXC

K

XRX

dT

dX

Overall rate of increase = growth rate – consumption rate

This model has 4 parameters—a lot for analysis!

Nondimensionalization reduces the number of parameters.

X/A is a dimensionless population; RT is a dimensionless time.

Page 29: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

The Dimensional Model

22

2

1XA

QXC

K

XRX

dT

dX

Overall rate of increase = growth rate – consumption rate

This model has 4 parameters—a lot for analysis!

Nondimensionalization reduces the number of parameters.

X/A is a dimensionless population; RT is a dimensionless time.

A

XxRTt :,:

Page 30: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Dimensionless Version

211

1

x

x

k

x

ccx

dt

dx

RA

CQc

A

Kk

R

tTAxX ,,,

Page 31: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Dimensionless Version

211

1

x

x

k

x

ccx

dt

dx

RA

CQc

A

Kk

R

tTAxX ,,,

k represents the environmental capacity.c represents the number of consumers.

Page 32: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Dimensionless Version

k represents the environmental capacity.c represents the number of consumers.(Decreasing A increases both k and c.)

211

1

x

x

k

x

ccx

dt

dx

RA

CQc

A

Kk

R

tTAxX ,,,

Page 33: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

211

1

x

x

k

x

cxc

dt

dx

(2C)

Page 34: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

211

1

x

x

k

x

cxc

dt

dx

211

1

x

x

k

x

c

The resource increases

(2C)

Page 35: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

211

1

x

x

k

x

cxc

dt

dx

211

1

x

x

k

x

c

k

x

cx

x1

1

1 2

The resource increases

The resource decreases

(2C)

Page 36: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

A “Textbook” Example

0 2 4 6 8 100

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

v

y

c = 1 Line above curve:Population increases

211

1

x

x

k

x

c

Page 37: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

A “Textbook” Example

0 2 4 6 8 100

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

v

y

c = 1

Low consumption – high resource level

Line above curve:Population increases

211

1

x

x

k

x

c

Page 38: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

A “Textbook” Example

0 2 4 6 8 100

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

v

y

c = 3

Curve above line:Population decreases

k

x

cx

x1

1

1 2

Page 39: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

A “Textbook” Example

High consumption – low resource level

0 2 4 6 8 100

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

v

y

c = 3

Curve above line:Population decreases

k

x

cx

x1

1

1 2

Page 40: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

A “Textbook” Example

Modest consumption – two possible resource levels

0 2 4 6 8 100

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

v

y

c = 2

Page 41: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

A “Textbook” Example

Modest consumption – two possible resource levels

0 2 4 6 8 100

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

v

y

c = 2Population stays low if x<2 (curve above line)

Page 42: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

A “Textbook” Example

Modest consumption – two possible resource levels

0 2 4 6 8 100

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

v

y

c = 2

Population becomes large if x>2(line above curve)

Page 43: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(2D) Whale Conservation

• Can we use our general resource model for whale conservation?

Page 44: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(2D) Whale Conservation

• Can we use our general resource model for whale conservation?

• Issues:– Model assumes fixed consumer population.

Page 45: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(2D) Whale Conservation

• Can we use our general resource model for whale conservation?

• Issues:– Model assumes fixed consumer population.

• We’ll look at distinct stages.

Page 46: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(2D) Whale Conservation

• Can we use our general resource model for whale conservation?

• Issues:– Model assumes fixed consumer population.

• We’ll look at distinct stages.

– Model assumes harvesting with uniform technology.

Page 47: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

(2D) Whale Conservation

• Can we use our general resource model for whale conservation?

• Issues:– Model assumes fixed consumer population.

• We’ll look at distinct stages.

– Model assumes harvesting with uniform technology.

• Advanced technology should strengthen the effects found in the model.

Page 48: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Stage 1 – natural balance

x

Page 49: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Stage 2 – depletion

Consumption increases to high level.

x

Page 50: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Stage 3 – inadequate correction

Consumption decreases to modest level.

x

Page 51: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Stage 4 – recovery

Consumption decreases to minimal level.

x

Page 52: The Past, Present, and Future of Endangered Whale Populations: An Introduction to Mathematical Modeling in Ecology Glenn Ledder University of Nebraska-Lincoln

Stage 5 – proper management

x

Consumption increases to modest level.