Publication | Closed Access
Interactions Among Gypsy Moths, White‐footed Mice, and Acorns
323
Citations
45
References
1996
Year
BiologySpatial EcologyLow DensitiesTheoretical EcologyNatural SciencesEntomologyEvolutionary BiologyHigh DensitiesGypsy MothsRodent EcologyDisease EcologyPopulation DevelopmentPublic HealthPopulation EcologyAnimal BehaviorStatisticsGypsy Moth
Low—density populations of gypsy moth, Lymantria dispar, were studied over a 10—yr period in Massachusetts. Increases in gypsy moth density were associated with declines in density of the white—footed mouse, Peromyscus leucopus, a principal predator. Furthermore, changes in density of P. leucopus populations were positively correlated with the density of acorn crops, a dominant winter food source for these mice. To demonstrate these effects we used a novel bootstrap regression method that adjusts for spatial and temporal autocorrelation in the time series data. The findings are compatible with a dual equilibrium model of gypsy moth population dynamics, in which low densities are regulated by mice and high densities are regulated by other factors, notably a virus disease.
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