Experience matters: context-dependent decisions explain spatial foraging patterns in the deposit-feeding crab Scopimera intermedia
Authored by Gray A Williams, T Y Hui
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2017.1442
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://www-ncbi-nlm-nih-gov.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/pmc/articles/PMC5577497/bin/rspb20171442supp1.docx
Abstract
Behavioural decisions are often context-dependent, where information
from immediate experience is incorporated into an individual's
decision-making, particularly in complex environments. To test whether
such mechanism is adopted by foragers in heterogeneous environments, we
investigated the foraging behaviour of the deposit-feeding sand-bubbler
crab, Scopimera intermedia. An individual-based model was constructed,
based on an optimal-patch selection criterion, which implicitly assumed
that individuals adjust foraging decisions based on immediate past
experience. The model's predictions were tested on the shore by
manipulating the location of food patches, where the crab showed a
strong context-dependent foraging pattern. When resources were randomly
distributed, the crab responded by spending 56\% of time in enriched
patches compared with only 28\% in the same area when patches were
composed of natural sediments. Shore manipulations varying resource
distribution supported the underlying principles of the model mechanism,
and highlighted the benefits of such a strategy in heterogeneous
environments such as intertidal sediments where food resources vary at
different spatial and temporal scales. The proposed model therefore
provides a mechanistic process, based on optimal foraging, to predict
foraging decisions and movement patterns of animals feeding in
heterogeneous landscapes.
Tags
Individual-based model
environment
Predation risk
information
Marine-sediments
Behavioral
ecology
Sampling
Optimal foraging
Reference window
Intertidal sediments
Uca-pugilator bosc
Sand fiddler-crab
Inflata decapoda
Carcinus-maenas
Animal
behavior