Energy benefits and emergent space use patterns of an empirically parameterized model of memory-based patch selection
Authored by Daniel Fortin, Jonathan R Potts, Jerod A Merkle
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1111/oik.03356
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Canadian Foundation for Innovation
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Many species frequently return to previously visited foraging sites.
This bias towards familiar areas suggests that remembering information
from past experience is beneficial. Such a memory-based foraging
strategy has also been hypothesized to give rise to restricted space use
(i.e. a home range). Nonetheless, the benefits of empirically derived
memory-based foraging tactics and the extent to which they give rise to
restricted space use patterns are still relatively unknown. Using a
combination of stochastic agent-based simulations and deterministic
integro-difference equations, we developed an adaptive link (based on
energy gains as a foraging currency) between memory-based patch
selection and its resulting spatial distribution. We used a memory-based
foraging model developed and parameterized with patch selection data of
free-ranging bison Bison bison in Prince Albert National Park, Canada.
Relative to random use of food patches, simulated foragers using both
spatial and attribute memory are more efficient, particularly in
landscapes with clumped resources. However, a certain amount of random
patch use is necessary to avoid frequent returns to relatively
poor-quality patches, or avoid being caught in a relatively poor quality
area of the landscape. Notably, in landscapes with clumped resources, simulated foragers that kept a reference point of the quality of
recently visited patches, and returned to previously visited patches
when local patch quality was poorer than the reference point, experienced higher energy gains compared to random patch use.
Furthermore, the model of memory-based foraging resulted in restricted
space use in simulated landscapes and replicated the restricted space
use observed in free-ranging bison reasonably well. Our work
demonstrates the adaptive value of spatial and attribute memory in
heterogeneous landscapes, and how home ranges can be a byproduct of
non-omniscient foragers using past experience to minimize temporal
variation in energy gains.
Tags
Individual-based model
Animal movement
Mechanisms
Resources
Habitat selection
Home ranges
Free-ranging bison
Sampling
information
Spatial information
Searching behavior