Effects of animal movement strategies and costs on the distribution of active subsidies across simple landscapes
Authored by Julia E Earl, Patrick A Zollner
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2014.03.020
Sponsors:
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
Department of Homeland Security
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
MATLAB
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://ars-els-cdn-com.ezproxy1.lib.asu.edu/content/image/1-s2.0-S0304380014001720-mmc1.txt
Abstract
Cross-ecosystem transfer of resources (spatial subsidies) can greatly
impact recipient ecosystems. Many subsidies are actively moved by
animals, which regularly transfer nutrients within and among ecosystems.
Researchers have yet to integrate knowledge of animal movement and
spatial subsidies to enhance predictions of subsidy spatial distribution
and ecosystem effects. To examine this, we implemented a spatially
explicit simulation model of animals that switch habitats due to
behavioral or ontogenetic shifts. We explored how movement strategy
(correlated random walk) and patterns of mortality risk affected the
spatial distribution of living (consumer subsidies) and dead individuals
(nutrient/energy subsidies). We ran models varying the correlation in a
correlated random walk and explored four patterns of mortality risk:
uniform mortality, higher mortality in the edge at the habitat boundary, a decreasing gradient and an increasing gradient of mortality risk as
individuals move away from the boundary. For each scenario, we
calculated the maximum extent, the distance of peak density and the peak
density (a measure of maximum impact of the subsidy) of living and dead
individuals. As expected, subsidy impact declined as deposition distance
increased. Straighter movements resulted in deposition farther beyond
the local habitat boundary with lower impact than more sinuous
movements. Similarly, consumer subsidies were deposited farther from the
boundary with lower impact than nutrient/energy subsidies. Patterns of
mortality risk also affected the impact and deposition distance but to a
lesser degree. Uniform mortality and increasing gradients of mortality
risk deposited subsidies farther from the habitat boundary than did edge
mortality and decreasing gradients. Edge mortality scenarios also
resulted in higher densities of subsidies than other patterns of
mortality risk. Our simulations represent a very simple, first attempt
at using movement ecology to predict the spatial distribution and
impacts of subsidies. More complex models and empirical tests are
necessary to further assess movement ecology's utility for predicting
subsidies. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
behavior
Dynamics
ecosystems
ecology
National-park
Level
Food-web
Straight-line
Carcasses
Nitrogen