Remembering the good and the bad: memory-based mediation of the food-safety trade-off in dynamic landscapes
Authored by Chloe Bracis, Eliezer Gurarie, Jeffery D Rutter, R Andrew Goodwin
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1007/s12080-018-0367-2
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
United States Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC)
Platforms:
Java
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Predator-prey interactions are central to fitness as animals
simultaneously avoid death and consume resources to ensure growth and
reproduction. Along with direct effects, predators can also exert strong
non-consumptive effects. For example, prey shift habitat use in the
presence of predators, a potentially learned behavior. The impact of
cognition on movement and predator interactions is largely unexplored
despite evidence of learned responses to predation threat. We explore
how learning and spatial memory influence predator-prey dynamics by
introducing predators into a memory-driven movement modeling framework.
To model various aspects of risk, we vary predator behavior: their
persistence and spatial correlation with the prey's resources. Memory
outperforms simpler movement processes most in patchy environments with
more predictable predators that are more easily avoided once learned. In
these cases, memory aids foragers in managing the food- safety
trade-off. For example, particular parameterizations of the predation
memory reduce encounters while maintaining consumption. We found that
non-consumptive effects are highest in landscapes of concentrated,
patchy resources. These effects are intensified when predators are
highly correlated with the forager's resources. Smooth landscapes
provide more opportunities for foragers to simultaneously consume
resources and avoid predators. Predators are able to effectively guard
all resources in very patchy landscapes. These non-consumptive effects
are also seen with the shift away from the best quality habitat compared
to foraging in a predator-free environment.
Tags
behavior
Decision-Making
Animal movement
Foraging
Foraging behavior
Antipredator behavior
Individual-based
model
Habitat selection
Individual behavior
Woodland caribou
Hunting mode
Predator-prey interactions
Non-consumptive effects
Conditioned fear