Parallel models of animal migration in Northern Yellowstone National Park
Authored by MW Berry, E Uziel
Date Published: 1995
DOI: 10.1177/109434209500900401
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
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Abstract
In landscape ecology, computer models are developed to simulate the
migration of animal groups as they exist in nature. Typically, these
models are sequential, and the animal groups move and forage in
sequence. In this work, we discuss a parallel implementation of the
NOYELP (NOrthern YELlowstone national Park) model on a 32-processor
Thinking Machines CM-5. NOYELP is a spatially explicit, individual-based
model that simulates the search, movement, and foraging activities of
groups of animals across the northern portion of Yellowstone National
Park. NOYELP is primarily used to study the effects of fire-scale and
pattern on the winter foraging dynamics and survival of free-ranging
bison and elk groups. Separate versions of a parallel NOYELP model
(referred to as PNOYELP) with different degrees of data-sharing and
message-passing are used to study the effects on travel distances and
semi-annual energy-gain statistics. Comparisons of these statistics with
the sequential NOYELP model are made, and reasonable speed improvements
(ranging from 2.8 to 6.7) for PNOYELP on the CM-5 over the sequential
model on a Sun SPARCstation 10 are reported.
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