Using an individual-based model to select among alternative foraging strategies of woodpigeons: Data support a memory-based model with a flocking mechanism
Authored by Richard M Sibly, P Thorbek, K A Kulakowska, T M Kulakowski, I R Inglis, G C Smith, P J Haynes, P Prosser
Date Published: 2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmode1.2013.09.019
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
Java
TRACE
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
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Abstract
Population modelling is increasingly recognised as a useful tool for
pesticide risk assessment. For vertebrates that may ingest pesticides
with their food, such as woodpigeon (Columba palumbus), population
models that simulate foraging behaviour explicitly can help predicting
both exposure and population-level impact. Optimal foraging theory is
often assumed to explain the individual-level decisions driving
distributions of individuals in the field, but it may not adequately
predict spatial and temporal characteristics of woodpigeon foraging
because of the woodpigeons' excellent memory, ability to fly long
distances, and distinctive flocking behaviour. Here we present an
individual-based model (IBM) of the woodpigeon. We used the model to
predict distributions of foraging woodpigeons that use one of six
alternative foraging strategies: optimal foraging, memory-based foraging
and random foraging, each with or without flocking mechanisms. We used
pattern-oriented modelling to determine which of the foraging strategies
is best able to reproduce observed data patterns. Data used for model
evaluation were gathered during a long-term woodpigeon study conducted
between 1961 and 2004 and a radiotracking study conducted in 2003 and
2004, both in the UK, and are summarised here as three complex patterns:
the distributions of foraging birds between vegetation types during the
year, the number of fields visited daily by individuals, and the
proportion of fields revisited by them on subsequent days. The model
with a memory-based foraging strategy and a flocking mechanism was the
only one to reproduce these three data patterns, and the optimal
foraging model produced poor matches to all of them. The random foraging
strategy reproduced two of the three patterns but was not able to
guarantee population persistence. We conclude that with the memory-based
foraging strategy including a flocking mechanism our model is realistic
enough to estimate the potential exposure of woodpigeons to pesticides.
We discuss how exposure can be linked to our model, and how the model
could be used for risk assessment of pesticides, for example predicting
exposure and effects in heterogeneous landscapes planted seasonally with
a variety of crops, while accounting for differences in land use between
landscapes. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Tags
population
spatial memory
information
Oilseed rape
Foragers
Pigeons columba-palumbus
Wood-pigeons
Feeding
behaviour
Radial maze
Cereal seed