Identifying mechanistic models of spatial behaviour using pattern-based modelling: An example from lizard home ranges
Authored by Andrew Tyre, Gregory D Kerr, Brigitte Tenhumberg, C Michael Bull
Date Published: 2007
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2007.06.004
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Abstract
Landscape and population level patterns form through the aggregation of
responses of individual organisms to heterogeneity. Spatial Organisation
within a population can range from random overlap of individual home
ranges, to completely exclusive territories, with most populations
falling somewhere between these two extremes. A fundamental question in
behavioural ecology concerns the factors that influence the degree of
spatial overlap of home ranges, and the processes that determine how
likely it is that an individual will access resources over its home
range. However, traditional experimental methods are not always
practical or possible. Pattern-based modelling is an alternative, non-intrusive technique for explaining observed patterns. We explored
behavioral mechanisms for home range overlap in a Scincid lizard, Tiliqua rugosa, by constructing a spatially explicit individual based
model. We tested two mechanisms, one that used refuge sites randomly and
one that included a behavioural component. The random use model, the
fixed total range model, incorporated all refuge sites within a circle
of radius h. The behavioural model, the variable total range model, probabilistically incorporated refuge sites based on nearest neighbour
distances and use by conspecifics. Comparisons between the simulated
patterns and the observed patterns of range overlap provided evidence
that the variable total range model was a better approximation of lizard
space use than the fixed total range model. Pattern-based modelling
showed substantial promise as a means for identifying behavioral
mechanisms underlying observed patterns. (C) 2007 Elsevier B.V. All
rights reserved.
Tags
Simulation
Movement patterns
population ecology
Field
Tiliqua-rugosa
Sleepy lizard
Microhabitat use
Body temperatures
Australian lizard