SOME POPULATION CONSEQUENCES OF VARIATION IN PREFERENCE AMONG INDIVIDUAL PREDATORS
Authored by TN Sherratt, AD MACDOUGALL
Date Published: 1995
DOI: 10.1111/j.1095-8312.1995.tb01053.x
Sponsors:
Nuffield Foundation
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A number of foraging studies have demonstrated that populations of
predators rarely consist of individuals with identical preferences for
particular types of prey. Variation among predators can lead to
frequency-dependent changes in population preference, because those
predators that prefer the rarer type of prey generally have the greatest
influence on population preference. In this study we develop a series of
theoretical models which demonstrate how anti-apostatic selection (i.e.
selection against the rare form) can arise out of (a) bimodal and (b)
normal variation in preference among individuals of the same species. We
show that population level anti-apostatic selection can occur even when
individual predators show proapostatic selection (i.e. selection against
the common form). Furthermore, patterns of population prey selection
that arise out of variation in preference can potentially be
pro-apostatic over one range of relative densities and anti-apostatic
over another range of relative densities. Finally, we examine a case
study involving predation by female waterboatmen Notonecta glauca and
show that the variation in preference in this species is large enough to
generate higher anti-apostatic selection than would be expected from the
diet selected by the average individual.
Tags
behavior
Model
Prey
Variability
Diet
Notonecta
Dependent food selection