Effectiveness of social information used by seabirds searching for unpredictable and ephemeral prey
Authored by Charlotte Boyd, Daniel Grunbaum, Jr George L Hunt, Andre E Punt, Henri Weimerskirch, Sophie Bertrand
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1093/beheco/arw039
Sponsors:
United States Office of Naval Research (ONR)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Understanding how seabirds and other central place foragers locate food
resources represents a key step in predicting responses to changes in
resource abundance and distribution. Where prey distributions are
unpredictable and ephemeral, seabirds may gain up-to-date information by
monitoring the direction of birds returning to the colony or by
monitoring the foraging behavior of other birds through local
enhancement. However, search strategies based on social information may
require high population densities, raising concerns about the potential
loss of information in declining populations. Our objectives were to
explore the mechanisms that underpin effective search strategies based
on social information under a range of population densities and
different foraging conditions. Testing relevant hypotheses through field
observation is challenging because of limitations in the ability to
manipulate population densities and foraging conditions. We therefore
developed a spatially explicit individual-based foraging model, informed
by data on the movement and foraging patterns of seabirds foraging on
pelagic prey, and used model simulations to investigate the mechanisms
underpinning search strategies. Orientation of outbound headings in line
with returning birds enables departing birds to avoid areas without prey
even at relatively low population densities. The mechanisms underpinning
local enhancement are more effective as population densities increase
and may be facilitated by other mechanisms that concentrate individuals
in profitable areas. For seabirds and other central place foragers
foraging on unpredictable and ephemeral food resources, information is
especially valuable when resources are spatially concentrated and may
play an important role in mitigating poor foraging conditions.
Tags
Evolution
models
Colonies
Public information
Local enhancement
Habitat selection
Antarctic
krill
Gannets
Albatrosses
Insights