Predation-Related Costs and Benefits of Conspecific Attraction in Songbirds-An Agent-Based Approach
Authored by Jakub Szymkowiak, Lechoslaw Kuczynski
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0119132
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
R
NetLogo
JAGS
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Songbirds that follow a conspecific attraction strategy in the habitat
selection process prefer to settle in habitat patches already occupied
by other individuals. This largely affects the patterns of their
spatio-temporal distribution and leads to clustered breeding. Although
making informed settlement decisions is expected to be beneficial for
individuals, such territory clusters may potentially provide additional
fitness benefits (e.g., through the dilution effect) or costs (e.g., possibly facilitating nest localization if predators respond
functionally to prey distribution). Thus, we hypothesized that the
fitness consequences of following a conspecific attraction strategy may
largely depend on the composition of the predator community. We
developed an agent-based model in which we simulated the settling
behavior of birds that use a conspecific attraction strategy and breed
in a multi-predator landscape with predators that exhibited different
foraging strategies. Moreover, we investigated whether Bayesian updating
of prior settlement decisions according to the perceived predation risk
may improve the fitness of birds that rely on conspecific cues. Our
results provide evidence that the fitness consequences of conspecific
attraction are predation-related. We found that in landscapes dominated
by predators able to respond functionally to prey distribution, clustered breeding led to fitness costs. However, this cost could be
reduced if birds performed Bayesian updating of prior settlement
decisions and perceived nesting with too many neighbors as a threat. Our
results did not support the hypothesis that in landscapes dominated by
incidental predators, clustered breeding as a byproduct of conspecific
attraction provides fitness benefits through the dilution effect. We
suggest that this may be due to the spatial scale of songbirds'
aggregative behavior. In general, we provide evidence that when
considering the fitness consequences of conspecific attraction for
songbirds, one should expect a trade-off between the benefits of making
informed decisions and the costs of clustering.
Tags
Animal behavior
birds
Density
Warbler phylloscopus-sibilatrix
Social information use
Habitat
selection
Public information
Nest predation
Ecological traps
Primeval forest