Migration or Residency? The Evolution of Movement Behavior and Information Usage in Seasonal Environments
Authored by Iain D Couzin, Allison K Shaw
Date Published: 2013
DOI: 10.1086/668600
Sponsors:
United States Office of Naval Research (ONR)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
C
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Migration, the seasonal movement of individuals among different
locations, is a behavior found throughout the animal kingdom. Although
migration is widely studied at taxonomically restricted levels, cross-taxonomic syntheses of migration are less common. As a result, we
lack answers to broad questions such as what ultimate factors generally
drive animal migration. Here we present such a synthesis by using a
spatially explicit, individual-based model in which we evolve behavior
rules via simulations under a wide range of ecological conditions to
answer two questions. First, under what types of ecological conditions
can an individual maximize its fitness by migrating (vs. being a
resident)? Second, what types of information do individuals use to guide
their movement? We show that migration is selected for when resource
distributions are dominated more by seasonality than by local
patchiness, and residency (non-migratory behavior) is selected for when
the reverse is true. When selected for, migration evolves as both a
movement behavior and an information usage strategy. We also find that
different types of migration can evolve, depending on the ecological
conditions and availability of information. Finally, we present
empirical support for our main results, drawn from migration patterns
exhibited by a variety of taxonomic groups.
Tags
Simulation
Decision-Making
Model
collective behavior
Animal groups
Bird migration
Fish
schools
Avian migration
Long-distance migration
Spawning
migration