Abstract
Species traits and environmental conditions determine the existence and
strength of trophic interactions, but how they do so is poorly
understood. To enable the informed inclusion of such driving factors in
dynamic trophic-interaction models, we revisit and expand the functional
and numerical response functions using a modular approach which is
readily integrated into existing models. We divide the trophic
interaction between predator and prey into eight steps: (1) search, (2)
prey detection, (3) attack decision, (4) pursuit, (5) subjugation, (6)
ingestion, (7) digestion, and (8) nutrient allocation. Formulating this
as a modular functional-response function, we build a general dynamical
model where trophic interactions can be explicitly parameterized for
multiple traits and environmental factors. We then concretize this
approach by outlining how a specific community can be modeled by
selecting key modules (steps) and parameterizing them for relevant
factors. This we exemplify for a community of terrestrial arthropods
using empirical data on body size and temperature responses. With
species interactions at the core of community dynamics, our modular
approach allows for quantification and comparisons of the importance of
different steps, traits, and abiotic factors across ecosystems and
trophic interaction types, and provides a powerful tool for trait-based
prediction of food-web structure and dynamics.