Inference from habitat-selection analysis depends on foraging strategies
Authored by Christian Dussault, Daniel Fortin, Guillaume Bastille-Rousseau
Date Published: 2010
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2656.2010.01737.x
Sponsors:
United Kingdom Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
P>1. Several methods have been developed to assess habitat selection, most of which are based on a comparison between habitat attributes in
used vs. unused or random locations, such as the popular resource
selection functions (RSFs). Spatial evaluation of residency time has
been recently proposed as a promising avenue for studying habitat
selection. Residency-time analyses assume a positive relationship
between residency time within habitat patches and selection. We
demonstrate that RSF and residency-time analyses provide different
information about the process of habitat selection. Further, we show how
the consideration of switching rate between habitat patches (interpatch
movements) together with residency-time analysis can reveal
habitat-selection strategies.
2. Spatially explicit, individual-based modelling was used to simulate
foragers displaying one of six foraging strategies in a heterogeneous
environment. The strategies combined one of three patch-departure rules
(fixed-quitting-harvest-rate, fixed-time and fixed-amount strategy), together with one of two interpatch-movement rules (random or biased).
Habitat selection of simulated foragers was then assessed using RSF, residency-time and interpatch-movement analyses.
3. Our simulations showed that RSFs and residency times are not always
equivalent. When foragers move in a non-random manner and do not
increase residency time in richer patches, residency-time analysis can
provide misleading assessments of habitat selection. This is because the
overall time spent in the various patch types not only depends on
residency times, but also on interpatch-movement decisions.
4. We suggest that RSFs provide the outcome of the entire selection
process, whereas residency-time and interpatch-movement analyses can be
used in combination to reveal the mechanisms behind the selection
process.
5. We showed that there is a risk in using residency-time analysis alone
to infer habitat selection. Residency-time analyses, however, may
enlighten the mechanisms of habitat selection by revealing central
components of resource-use strategies. Given that management decisions
are often based on resource-selection analyses, the evaluation of
resource-use strategies can be key information for the development of
efficient habitat-management strategies. Combining RSF, residency-time
and interpatch-movement analyses is a simple and efficient way to gain a
more comprehensive understanding of habitat selection.
Tags
models
Landscape
movement
scale
Yellowstone-national-park
Searching behavior
Range
1st-passage time analysis
Resource
selection
Radio-tracking