1.NC3 - A Novel Synthesis of Individualisation across Behaviour, Ecology and Evolution: Niche Choice, Niche Conformance, Niche Construction

Individuals differ. This seemingly trivial statement has nevertheless led to paradigm shifts, as three different fields of organismal biology have seen a marked change in key concepts over the last years. In ecology, an increasing focus is likewise on the considerable variation in the ecological niche realised by species, populations, and even individuals. A key focus of this group (the DFG funded CRC) is Individual-Based-Research i.e. the study of individuals and their interactions with the (social) environment.

Our aim in project D02 (with Co-PI Prof. Dr. Marie Kaiser, our postdoc Dr. Katie Morrow and our PhD student Marlene van den Bos), is to provide a philosophical framework for IBR in biology. We will use the CRC as a philosophical case study to explore what IBR in biology is, how its central concepts can be understood, what kind of complexity it is concerned with, what its strengths and limitations are, which methodological challenges it encounters, and how the integration of findings from different biological fields is achieved in IBR.

Our project is divided into three parts:

1.Concepts in IBR.

According to the standard conception in the CRC, individualised niches consist only of those environmental conditions that affect (i.e. increase or decrease) the fitness of an individual. This standard conception raises three sets of questions. First, should we really assume that fitness effects determine the dimensions of an individualised niche? Second, what belongs to the environment of a particular individual and how can individualised environments be distinguished from individualised niches? Third, what makes individualised niches social, what makes them temporal? Answering these questions helps to develop the standard conception of an individualised niche further. Another major goal is to meet the challenge of a plurality of individualised niche concepts. Our aim is to guide this discussion by identifying alternative niche concepts, explicating their differences (e.g. are niches located more on the side of the individual or environment), and analysing which niche concepts work best in which research contexts and in regard to which epistemic goals.

2. Epistemology of IBR

Photo from https://biologydictionary.net/meta-analysis/

Our research questions concern the relationship between individuality and uniqueness and the notion of complexity. Complexity alone does not explain the epistemic difficulties of studying complex systems: it is heterogeneity that limits the transferability and generalisability of results across systems or across time (thus also constraining predictability). Are individuality and uniqueness instances of heterogeneity? If yes, then how does heterogeneity manifest in biological practice? Are there differences in terms of how heterogeneity is studied within the CRC? More specifically, how do Individual-Based Models (IBMs) and meta-analyses analyse heterogeneity? We also hope that the answers to these questions can shed light on the epistemic challenge, i.e. how is it possible to gain knowledge about individuals through investigation of groups? Does the particular way in which individuals and uniqueness are treated in IBMs and meta-analyses shed light on the matter?

3. Integration in IBR.

We aim to examine how the findings from different scientific fields actually are integrated in the CRC as an instance of IBR. We focus on the integrative practices that occur within different biological fields, and we examine how the theoretical framework of NC3-mechanisms fosters integration between ecology, behavioural, and evolutionary biology.

 

2. Parnassius smintheus Overwintering

Female P. smintheus

Female P. smintheus

Male P. smintheus

Male P. smintheus

Summary

Parnassius smintheus is a high altitude butterfly which lives in the Rockies (US and Canada). The caterpillars feed on the leaves of the succulent Sedum lanceolata, and the adults feed on its nectar. Over the last 20 years, there has been dramatic variation in population growth from year to year, yet it seems that the drops in population correspond to years with excessively warm Novembers. The general hypothesis is that the warm Novembers affect the larvae's ability to survive the winter. The aim of the project is to determine the exact way in which warm Novembers affect the mechanisms of overwintering. 

We collected P. smintheus eggs from the field site in Kananaskis AB (in 2015 and 2016). They incubated incubate in realistic ecological conditions (variable night and day temperatures, variable humidity) until November. Then, the eggs were divided into two groups: the control will incubate at standard (cool) November temperatures while the experimental group incubated in a warm treatment. After that, all the eggs continued incubating at realistic ecological conditions, simulating winter and spring temperatures, until they hatch. We have conducted a number of parallel experiments on the two different groups, including:

  1. Measurement of energy reserves 

  2. Measurement of Supercooling Points

  3. Survivorship after hatching

Acknowledgments

I am indebted to the Sinclair lab (Western University) and the Matter lab (University of Cincinnati) for introducing me to these ideas, helping me out and for putting up with and engaging with an interminable number of philosophical questions. After leaving Western for Helsinki, the experimental work is being continued by Kurtis Turnbull (Western University, Sinclair lab). 

 

 

Sedum lanceolata - Host plant

Sedum lanceolata - Host plant

S. lanceolata leaves

S. lanceolata leaves