Alternative forms of competition and predation dramatically affect habitat selection under foraging-predation-risk trade-offs
Authored by TC Grand
Date Published: 2002
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/13.2.280
Sponsors:
National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Habitat selection under foraging-predation-risk trade-offs has been a
frequent topic of interest to theoretical behavioral and evolutionary
ecologists. However, most habitat selection models assume that
individuals compete exploitatively for resources and that predation is
either density independent or diluted completely by competitor number, despite empirical evidence that other forms of competition and predation
also occur in nature. I developed an individual-based model for studying
the effects of alternative forms of competition and predation on the
process of habitat selection under foraging-predation-risk trade-offs.
To make the model more relevant to natural populations, I assumed that
individuals vary continuously in traits related to competitive ability
and vulnerability to predation aid allowed resources and predators to be
distributed across snore than two habitats. The results of my
investigation demonstrate that the predicted pattern of habitat
selection can be affected dramatically by the form predation is assumed
to take. When predation is density dependent or frequency dependent, individuals will tend to be distributed across habitats according to
their absolute vulnerability to predation. In contrast, when predation
is density dependent or vulnerability dependent, individuals will tend
to segregate by competitive ability. Whether one assumes that
individuals compete for resources via exploitation or interference also
influences the predicted pattern of habitat selection. In general, interference competition results in a more even distribution of
competitors across habitats.
Tags
behavior
morphology
Gasterosteus-aculeatus
Ideal free distributions
Dilution
Threespine
stickleback
Energetic equivalence
Optimization models
Unequal
competitors
Differ