Resource distributions and diet development by trial-and-error learning
Authored by der Post Daniel J van, Paulien Hogeweg
Date Published: 2006
DOI: 10.1007/s00265-006-0237-6
Sponsors:
Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
We study interactions between resource distributions, grouping, and diet
development in foragers who learn by trial-and-error. We do this by
constructing an individual-based model where individuals move and forage
in groups in a 2-D space with high resource diversity and learn what to
eat. By comparing diet development in different resource distributions, and in gregarious and solitary individuals, we elucidate how these
factors affect patterns of diet variation. Our results indicate that
different resource distributions have profound effects on learning
opportunities, and thereby lead to contrasting phenomena. In uniform
environments, local resource depletion by gregarious individuals, in
interaction with learning, leads to diet differentiation. In patchy
environments, grouping leads to enhanced diet overlap within groups and
leads to differences in diet between groups. Surprisingly, mixed
environments can generate all these phenomena simultaneously. Our
results predict relationships between diet variation, trial-and-error
learning, and resource distributions. The phenomena we describe are not
evolved strategies, but arise spontaneously when groups of individuals
learn to forage in certain resource distributions. This suggests that
describing diet specialization or diet homogenization as the result of
behavioral strategies may not always be justified.
Tags
Specialization
ecology
preferences
Mechanisms
Food
Monkeys macaca-fuscata
Aversions