Movement rules for individual-based models of stream fish
Authored by Steven F Railsback, Bret C Harvey, RH Lamberson, WE Duffy
Date Published: 1999
DOI: 10.1016/s0304-3800(99)00124-6
Sponsors:
Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI)
Pacific Gas & Electric (PG&E)
Southern California Edison (SCE)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Spatially explicit individual-based models (IBMs) use movement rules to
determine when an animal departs its current location and to determine
its movement destination; these rules are therefore critical to accurate
simulations. Movement rules typically define some measure of how an
individual's expected fitness varies among locations, under the
assumption that animals make movement decisions at least in part to
increase their fitness. Recent research shows that many fish move
quickly in response to changes in physical and biological conditions, so
movement rules should allow fish to rapidly select the best location
that is accessible. The theory that a fish's fitness is maximized by
minimizing the ratio of mortality risk to food intake is not applicable
to typical IBM movement decisions and can cause serious errors in common
situations. Instead, we developed fitness measures from unified foraging
theory that are theoretically and computationally compatible with
individual-based fish models. One such fitness measure causes a fish to
select habitat that maximizes its expected probability of survival over
a specified time horizon, considering both starvation and other risks.
This fitness measure is dependent on the fish's current state, making
fish with low energy reserves more willing to accept risks in exchange
for higher food intake. Another new measure represents the expectation
of reaching reproductive maturity by multiplying expected survival by a
factor indicating how close to the size of first reproduction the fish
grows within the time horizon. One of the primary benefits of the
individual-based approach is avoiding the need for simplifying
assumptions; this benefit is best realized by basing movement decisions
on such simple, direct measures of fitness as expected survival and
expected reproductive maturity. (C) 1999 Elsevier Science B.V. All
rights reserved.
Tags
Simulations
Risk
Population-dynamics
Habitat selection
Grayling thymallus-arcticus
Positions
Salmonids
Juvenile rainbow-trout
Restricted
movement
Predation hazard