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The potential for the use of agent-based models in ecotoxicology

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Topping, C.J., Dalkvist, T. , Forbes, V. E., Grimm, V. and Sibly, R. M. orcid id iconORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6828-3543 (2009) The potential for the use of agent-based models in ecotoxicology. In: Devillers, J. (ed.) Ecotoxicology Modeling (Emerging Topics in Ecotoxicology). Springer , pp. 205-235. ISBN 9781441901965

Abstract/Summary

This chapter introduces ABMs, their construction, and the pros and cons of their use. Although relatively new, agent-basedmodels (ABMs) have great potential for use in ecotoxicological research – their primary advantage being the realistic simulations that can be constructed and particularly their explicit handling of space and time in simulations. Examples are provided of their use in ecotoxicology primarily exemplified by different implementations of the ALMaSS system. These examples presented demonstrate how multiple stressors, landscape structure, details regarding toxicology, animal behavior, and socioeconomic effects can and should be taken into account when constructing simulations for risk assessment. Like ecological systems, in ABMs the behavior at the system level is not simply the mean of the component responses, but the sum of the often nonlinear interactions between components in the system; hence this modeling approach opens the door to implementing and testing much more realistic and holistic ecotoxicological models than are currently used.

Item Type Book or Report Section
URI https://reading-clone.eprints-hosting.org/id/eprint/9712
Item Type Book or Report Section
Divisions Life Sciences > School of Biological Sciences
Uncontrolled Keywords Population-level risk assessment , ALMaSS , Pattern-oriented modeling, ODD , Multiple stressors
Publisher Springer
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