An individual-based model of ectotherm movement integrating metabolic and microclimatic constraints
Authored by Michael R Kearney, C Michael Bull, Matthew Malishev
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1111/2041-210x.12909
Sponsors:
Australian Research Council (ARC)
Platforms:
R
NetLogo
RNetlogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/darwinanddavis/MalishevBullKearney
Abstract
An understanding of the direct links between animals and their
environment can offer insights into the drivers and constraints to
animal movement. Constraints on movement interact in complex ways with
the physiology of the animal (metabolism) and physical environment (food
and weather), but can be modelled using physical principles of energy
and mass exchange. Here, we describe a general, spatially explicit
individual-based movement model that couples a nutritional energy and
mass budget model (dynamic energy budget theory) with a biophysical
model of heat exchange. This provides a highly integrated method for
constraining an ectothermic animal's movement in response to how food
and microclimates vary in space and time. The model uses r to drive a
NetLogo individual-based model together with microclimate and energy-
and mass-budget modelling functions from the r package NicheMapR. It
explicitly incorporates physiological and morphological traits,
behavioural thermoregulation, movement strategies and movement costs.
From this, the model generates activity budgets of foraging and
shade-seeking, home range behaviour, spatial movement patterns and life
history consequences under user-defined configurations of food and
microclimates. To illustrate the model, we run simulations of the
Australian sleepy lizard Tiliqua rugosa under different movement
strategies (optimising or satisficing) in two contrasting habitats of
varying food and shade (sparse and dense). We then compare the results
with real, fine-scale movement data of a wild population throughout the
breeding season. Our results show that (1) the extremes of movement
behaviour observed in sleepy lizards are consistent with feeding
requirements (passive movement) and thermal constraints (active
movement), (2) the model realistically captures majority of the
distribution of observed home range size, (3) both satisficing and
optimising movement strategies appear to exist in the wild population,
but home range size more closely approximates an optimising strategy,
and (4) satisficing was more energetically efficient than optimising
movement, which returned no additional benefit in metabolic fitness
outputs. This framework for predicting physical constraints to
individual movement can be extended to individual-level interactions
with the same or different species and provides new capabilities for
forecasting future responses to novel resource and weather scenarios.
Tags
Individual-based model
Movement ecology
Spatial
Climate-change
Environmental-change
Thermoregulation
Dynamic energy budget
Cost-benefit model
Life-histories
Ecological consequences
Body-temperature
Biophysical ecology
Microclimate
Home-range dynamics
Thermoregulatory behavior
Terrestrial ectotherms
Thermal biology