Filtering by
- All Subjects: Biology
- All Subjects: Honeybees
- Creators: Kang, Yun
- Member of: Theses and Dissertations
- Status: Published
First, a data-driven model is derived for neutral lipid synthesis in green microalgae with respect to nitrogen limitation. This model synthesizes several established frameworks in phycology and ecological stoichiometry. The model demonstrates how the cell quota is a useful abstraction for understanding the metabolic shift to neutral lipid production that is observed in certain oleaginous species.
Next a producer-grazer model is developed based on the cell quota model and nutrient recycling. The model incorporates a novel feedback loop to account for animal toxicity due to accumulation of nitrogen waste. The model exhibits rich, complex dynamics which leave several open mathematical questions.
Lastly, disease dynamics in vivo are in many ways analogous to those of an ecosystem, giving natural extensions of the cell quota concept to disease modeling. Prostate cancer can be modeled within this framework, with androgen the limiting nutrient and the prostate and cancer cells as competing species. Here the cell quota model provides a useful abstraction for the dependence of cellular proliferation and apoptosis on androgen and the androgen receptor. Androgen ablation therapy is often used for patients in biochemical recurrence or late-stage disease progression and is in general initially effective. However, for many patients the cancer eventually develops resistance months to years after treatment begins. Understanding how and predicting when hormone therapy facilitates evolution of resistant phenotypes has immediate implications for treatment. Cell quota models for prostate cancer can be useful tools for this purpose and motivate applications to other diseases.
The success of social insects is dependent upon cooperative behavior and adaptive strategies shaped by natural selection that respond to internal or external conditions. The objective of my research was to investigate specific mechanisms that have helped shaped the structure of division of labor observed in social insect colonies, including age polyethism and nutrition, and phenomena known to increase colony survival such as egg cannibalism. I developed various Ordinary Differential Equation (ODE) models in which I applied dynamical, bifurcation, and sensitivity analysis to carefully study and visualize biological outcomes in social organisms to answer questions regarding the conditions under which a colony can survive. First, I investigated how the population and evolutionary dynamics of egg cannibalism and division of labor can promote colony survival. I then introduced a model of social conflict behavior to study the inclusion of different response functions that explore the benefits of cannibalistic behavior and how it contributes to age polyethism, the change in behavior of workers as they age, and its biological relevance. Finally, I introduced a model to investigate the importance of pollen nutritional status in a honeybee colony, how it affects population growth and influences division of labor within the worker caste. My results first reveal that both cannibalism and division of labor are adaptive strategies that increase the size of the worker population, and therefore, the persistence of the colony. I show the importance of food collection, consumption, and processing rates to promote good colony nutrition leading to the coexistence of brood and adult workers. Lastly, I show how taking into account seasonality for pollen collection improves the prediction of long term consequences.
In Chapters 2 and 3, I demonstrate how this approach provides novel insights into factors that shape the flexibility and robustness of task organization in harvester ant colonies (Pogonomyrmex barbatus). My results show that the degree to which colonies can respond to work in fluctuating environments depends on how individuals weigh the costs of activity and update their behavior in response to social information. In Chapter 4, I introduce a mathematical framework to study the emergence of collective organization in heterogenous groups. My approach, which is based on the theory of multi-agent systems, focuses on myopic agents whose behavior emerges out of an independent valuation of alternative choices in a given work environment. The product of this dynamic is an equilibrium organization in which agents perform different tasks (or abstain from work) with an analytically defined set of threshold probabilities. The framework is minimally developed, but can be extended to include other factors known to affect task decisions including individual experience and social facilitation. This research contributes a novel approach to developing (and analyzing) models of task organization that can be applied in a broader range of contexts where animals cooperate.
Studying the effects of viruses and toxins on honey bees is important in order to understand the danger these important pollinators are exposed to. Hives exist in various environments, and different colonies are exposed to varying environmental conditions and dangers. To properly study the changes and effects of seasonality and pesticides on the population dynamics of honey bees, the presence of each of these threats must be considered. This study aims to analyze how infected colonies grapple more deeply with changing, seasonal environments, and how toxins in pesticides affect population dynamics. Thus, it addresses the following questions: How do viruses within a colony affect honey bee population dynamics when the environment is seasonal? How can the effects of pesticides be modeled to better understand the spread of toxins? This project is a continuation of my own undergraduate work in a previous class, MAT 350: Techniques and Applications of Applied Mathematics, with Dr. Yun Kang, and also utilizes previous research conducted by graduate students. Original research focused on the population dynamics of honey bee disease interactions (without considering seasonality), and a mathematical modeling approach to analyze the effects of pesticides on honey bees. In order to pursue answers to the main research questions, the model for honey bee virus interaction was adapted to account for seasonality. The adaptation of this model allowed the new model to account for the effects of seasonality on infected colony population dynamics. After adapting the model, simulations with arbitrary data were run using RStudio in order to gain insight into the specific ways in which seasonality affected the interaction between a honey bee colony and viruses. The second portion of this project examines a system of ordinary differential equations that represent the effect of pesticides on honey bee population dynamics, and explores the process of this model’s formulation. Both systems of equations used as the basis for each model’s research question are from previous research reports. This project aims to further that research, and explore the applications of applied mathematics to biological issues.