Chaos and Population Control of Insect Outbreaks

Robert A. Desharnais, R. F. Costantino, J. M. Cushing, Shandelle M. Henson, and Brian Dennis


Abstract

We used small perturbations in adult numbers to control large fluctuations in the chaotic demographic dynamics of laboratory populations of the flour beetle Tribolium castaneum. A nonlinear mathematical model was used to identify a sensitive region of phase space where the addition of a few adult insects would result in a dampening of the life stage fluctuations. Three experimental treatments were applied: one in which perturbations were made whenever the populations were inside the sensitive region ("in-box treatment"), another where perturbations were made whenever the populations were outside the sensitive region ("out-box treatment"), and an unperturbed control. The in-box treatment caused a stabilization of insect densities at numbers well below the peak values exhibited by the out-box and control populations. This study demonstrates how small perturbations can be used to influence the chaotic dynamics of an ecological system.



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Desharnais, R.A., Dennis, B., Cushing, J.M., Henson, S.M., and Costantino, R.F. 2001. Chaos and population control of insect outbreaks. Ecology Letters 4: 229–235.

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This work was supported in part by grants DMS-9306271, DMS-9319073, DMS-9625576, DMS-9616205, DMS-9981374, DMS-9973126, DMS-9981458, and DMS-9981423 from the U.S. National Science Foundation. All opinions expressed are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the NSF.

  Copyright © 1997-2002, Robert A Desharnais
Department of Biological Sciences
California State University, Los Angeles, CA, 90032-8201
Email: rdeshar@calstatela.edu