Behavioral tradeoffs when dispersing across a patchy landscape

被引:137
作者
Zollner, PA [1 ]
Lima, SL
机构
[1] US Forest Serv, USDA, N Cent Res Stn, 5985 Highway K, Rhinelander, WI 54501 USA
[2] Indiana State Univ, Dept Life Sci, Terre Haute, IN 47809 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.0030-1299.2005.13711.x
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
A better understanding of the behavior of dispersing animals will assist in determining the factors that limit their success and ultimately help improve the way dispersal is incorporated into population models. To that end, we used a simulation model to investigate three questions about behavioral tradeoffs that dispersing animals might face: (i) speed of movement against risk of predation, (ii) speed of movement against foraging, and (iii) perceptual range against risk of predation. The first investigation demonstrated that dispersing animals can generally benefit by slowing from maximal speed to perform anti-predatory behavior. The optimal speed was most strongly influenced by the disperser's energetic reserves, the risk of predation it faced, the interaction between these two parameters, and the effectiveness of its anti-predatory behavior. Patch arrangement and the search strategy employed by the dispersers had marginal effects on this tradeoff relative to the above parameters. The second investigation demonstrated that slowing movement to forage during dispersal may increase success and that optimum speed of dispersal was primarily a function of the dispersing animal's energetic reserves, predation risk, and their interaction. The richness (density of food resources) of the interpatch matrix and the patch arrangement had relatively minor impacts on how much time a dispersing animal should spend foraging. The final investigation demonstrated animals may face tradeoffs between dispersing under conditions that involve a low risk of predation but limit their ability to perceive distant habitat (necessitating more time spent searching for habitat) and conditions that are inherently more risky but allow animals to perceive distant habitat more readily. The precise nature of this tradeoff was sensitive to the form of the relationship between predation risk and perceptual range. Our overall results suggest that simple depictions of these behavioral tradeoffs might suffice in spatially explicit population models.
引用
收藏
页码:219 / 230
页数:12
相关论文
共 88 条
[41]   POTENTIAL EFFECTS OF A FOREST MANAGEMENT PLAN ON BACHMAN SPARROWS (AIMOPHILA-AESTIVALIS) - LINKING A SPATIALLY EXPLICIT MODEL WITH GIS [J].
LIU, JG ;
DUNNING, JB ;
PULLIAM, HR .
CONSERVATION BIOLOGY, 1995, 9 (01) :62-75
[42]   THE FORM AND CONSEQUENCES OF RANDOM-WALK MOVEMENT MODELS [J].
MARSH, LM ;
JONES, RE .
JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY, 1988, 133 (01) :113-131
[43]   Vigilance as a benefit of intermittent locomotion in small mammals [J].
McAdam, AG ;
Kramer, DL .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 1998, 55 :109-117
[44]   Effects of food deprivation and olfactory and visual cues on movement patterns of two Eleodes species (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae) in a wind tunnel [J].
McIntyre, NE ;
Vaughn, TT .
ANNALS OF THE ENTOMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1997, 90 (02) :260-265
[45]   Interactions between habitat abundance and configuration: experimental validation of some predictions from percolation theory [J].
McIntyre, NE ;
Wiens, JA .
OIKOS, 1999, 86 (01) :129-137
[46]   Interactions between landscape structure and animal behavior: the roles of heterogeneously distributed resources and food deprivation on movement patterns [J].
McIntyre, NE ;
Wiens, JA .
LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 1999, 14 (05) :437-447
[47]   Using body size to predict perceptual range [J].
Mech, SG ;
Zollner, PA .
OIKOS, 2002, 98 (01) :47-52
[48]   RESUMPTION OF FEEDING UNDER RISK OF PREDATION - EFFECT OF MIGRATORY CONDITION [J].
MOORE, FR .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 1994, 48 (04) :975-977
[49]  
Morales JM, 2002, ECOLOGY, V83, P2240
[50]   Body fat and time of year interact to mediate dispersal behaviour in ground squirrels [J].
Nunes, S ;
Ha, CDT ;
Garrett, PJ ;
Mueke, EM ;
Smale, L ;
Holekamp, KE .
ANIMAL BEHAVIOUR, 1998, 55 :605-614