Test of a behavior-based individual-based model: Response of shorebird mortality to habitat loss
Authored by Richard A Stillman, John D Goss-Custard, Andrew D West, Selwyn McGrorty, Niall H K Burton, Nigel A Clark, Peter N Ferns, Christopher J Reading, Mark M Rehfisch, Ian Townend, David H Worrall
Date Published: 2006
DOI: 10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016[2215:toabim]2.0.co;2
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Abstract
In behavior-based individual-based models (IBMs), demographic functions
are emergent properties of the model and are not built into the model
structure itself, as is the case with the more widely used
demography-based IBMs. Our behavior-based IBM represents the physiology
and behavioral decision making of individual animals and, from that, predicts how many survive the winter nonbreeding season, an important
component of fitness.
This paper provides the first test of such a model by predicting the
change in winter mortality of a charadriid shorebird following removal
of intertidal feeding habitat, the main effect of which was to increase
bird density. After adjusting one calibration parameter to the level
required to replicate the observed mortality rate before habitat loss, the model predicted that mortality would increase by 3.65\%, which
compares well with the observed increase of 3.17\%. The implication that
mortality was density-dependent was confirmed by predicting mortality
over a range of bird densities. Further simulations showed that the
density dependence was due to an increase in both interference and
depletion competition as bird density increased.
Other simulations suggested that an additional area of mudflat, equivalent to only 10\% of the area that had been lost, would be needed
by way of mitigation to return mortality to its original level. Being
situated at a high shore level with the flow of water in and out impeded
by inlet pipes, the mitigating mudflat would be accessible to birds when
all mudflats in the estuary were covered at high tide, thus providing
the birds with extra feeding time and not just a small replacement
mudflat.
Apart from providing the first, and confidence-raising, test of a
behavior-based IBM, the results suggest (1) that the chosen calibration
procedure was effective; (2) that where no new fieldwork is required, and despite being parameter rich, a behavior-based IBM can be
parameterized quickly (few weeks), and thus cheaply, because so many of
the parameter values can be obtained from the literature and are
embedded in the model; and (3) that behavior-based IBMs can be used to
explore system behavior (e.g., the role of depletion competition and
interference competition in density-dependent mortality).
Tags
ecology
birds
Density
Populations
Areas
Estuary
Carrying-capacity
Depth
Redshank tringa-totanus
Feeding grounds