Abstract

Locusts are significant agricultural pests. Under favorable environmental conditions flightless juveniles may aggregate into coherent, aligned swarms referred to as hopper bands. These bands are often observed as a propagating wave having a dense front with rapidly decreasing density in the wake. A tantalizing and common observation is that these fronts slow and steepen in the presence of green vegetation. This suggests the collective motion of the band is mediated by resource consumption. Our goal is to model and quantify this effect. We focus on the Australian plague locust, for which excellent field and experimental data is available. Exploiting the alignment of locusts in hopper bands, we concentrate solely on the density variation perpendicular to the front. We develop two models in tandem; an agent-based model that tracks the position of individuals and a partial differential equation model that describes locust density. In both these models, locust are either stationary (and feeding) or moving. Resources decrease with feeding. The rate at which locusts transition between moving and stationary (and vice versa) is enhanced (diminished) by resource abundance. This effect proves essential to the formation, shape, and speed of locust hopper bands in our models. From the biological literature we estimate ranges for the ten input parameters of our models. Sobol sensitivity analysis yields insight into how the band's collective characteristics vary with changes in the input parameters. By examining 4.4 million parameter combinations, we identify biologically consistent parameters that reproduce field observations. We thus demonstrate that resource-dependent behavior can explain the density distribution observed in locust hopper bands. This work suggests that feeding behaviors should be an intrinsic part of future modeling efforts.

Highlights

  • Locusts are a significant agricultural pest in parts of Africa, Asia, Central and South America, and Australia

  • Locusts aggregate in swarms that threaten agriculture worldwide. These aggregations form as aligned groups, known as hopper bands, whose individuals alternate between marching and paused states

  • The Australian plague locust forms wide crescent-shaped bands with a high density at the front where locusts slow in uneaten vegetation

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Summary

Introduction

Locusts are a significant agricultural pest in parts of Africa, Asia, Central and South America, and Australia They aggregate in large groups with as many as billions of individuals that move collectively, consuming large quantities of vegetation [1, 2]. Flightless nymphs march along the ground in aligned groups, often through agricultural systems where they cause significant crop damage as they feed and advance [4, 7, 8]. Some species, such as the brown locust Locustana pardalina, form intertwining streams of relatively homogeneous density [1, 2, 8]. In areas lacking green feed, bands lose their dense fronts and extend to form long streams, frequently exhibiting marked differences in density throughout

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