Understanding how animal groups achieve coordinated movement
Authored by J E Herbert-Read
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1242/jeb.129411
Sponsors:
Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Moving animal groups display remarkable feats of coordination. This
coordination is largely achieved when individuals adjust their movement
in response to their neighbours' movements and positions. Recent
advancements in automated tracking technologies, including computer
vision and GPS, now allow researchers to gather large amounts of data on
the movements and positions of individuals in groups. Furthermore, analytical techniques from fields such as statistical physics now allow
us to identify the precise interaction rules used by animals on the
move. These interaction rules differ not only between species, but also
between individuals in the same group. These differences have
wide-ranging implications, affecting how groups make collective
decisions and driving the evolution of collective motion. Here, I
describe how trajectory data can be used to infer how animals interact
in moving groups. I give examples of the similarities and differences in
the spatial and directional organisations of animal groups between
species, and discuss the rules that animals use to achieve this
organisation. I then explore how groups of the same species can exhibit
different structures, and ask whether this results from individuals
adapting their interaction rules. I then examine how the interaction
rules between individuals in the same groups can also differ, and
discuss how this can affect ecological and evolutionary processes.
Finally, I suggest areas of future research.
Tags
Individual-based model
collective motion
Decision-Making
Fish schools
Social-learning strategies
3-dimensional structure
Information-transfer
Nutritional
state
Starflag handbook
Spatial position