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Perceptual Ranges, Information Gathering, and Foraging Success in Dynamic Landscapes
by
Bewick, Sharon
, Fagan, William F.
, Gurarie, Eliezer
, Cantrell, Robert Stephen
, Howard, Allison
, Cosner, Chris
in
Animal Distribution
/ Animals
/ Chemoreception
/ Chemotaxis
/ Decision making
/ Ecosystem
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Forage
/ Information
/ Information processing
/ Land use
/ Landscape
/ Models, Biological
/ Movement
/ Perception
/ Sensory perception
2017
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Perceptual Ranges, Information Gathering, and Foraging Success in Dynamic Landscapes
by
Bewick, Sharon
, Fagan, William F.
, Gurarie, Eliezer
, Cantrell, Robert Stephen
, Howard, Allison
, Cosner, Chris
in
Animal Distribution
/ Animals
/ Chemoreception
/ Chemotaxis
/ Decision making
/ Ecosystem
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Forage
/ Information
/ Information processing
/ Land use
/ Landscape
/ Models, Biological
/ Movement
/ Perception
/ Sensory perception
2017
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Do you wish to request the book?
Perceptual Ranges, Information Gathering, and Foraging Success in Dynamic Landscapes
by
Bewick, Sharon
, Fagan, William F.
, Gurarie, Eliezer
, Cantrell, Robert Stephen
, Howard, Allison
, Cosner, Chris
in
Animal Distribution
/ Animals
/ Chemoreception
/ Chemotaxis
/ Decision making
/ Ecosystem
/ Feeding Behavior
/ Forage
/ Information
/ Information processing
/ Land use
/ Landscape
/ Models, Biological
/ Movement
/ Perception
/ Sensory perception
2017
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Perceptual Ranges, Information Gathering, and Foraging Success in Dynamic Landscapes
Journal Article
Perceptual Ranges, Information Gathering, and Foraging Success in Dynamic Landscapes
2017
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Overview
How organisms gather and utilize information about their landscapes is central to understanding land-use patterns and population distributions. When such information originates beyond an individual’s immediate vicinity, movement decisions require integrating information out to some perceptual range. Such nonlocal information, whether obtained visually, acoustically, or via chemosensation, provides a field of stimuli that guides movement. Classically, however, models have assumed movement based on purely local information (e.g., chemotaxis, step-selection functions). Here we explore how foragers can exploit nonlocal information to improve their success in dynamic landscapes. Using a continuous time/continuous space model in which we vary both random (diffusive) movement and resource-following (advective) movement, we characterize the optimal perceptual ranges for foragers in dynamic landscapes. Nonlocal information can be highly beneficial, increasing the spatiotemporal concentration of foragers on their resources up to twofold compared with movement based on purely local information. However, nonlocal information is most useful when foragers possess both high advective movement (allowing them to react to transient resources) and low diffusive movement (preventing them from drifting away from resource peaks). Nonlocal information is particularly beneficial in landscapes with sharp (rather than gradual) patch edges and in landscapes with highly transient resources.
Publisher
The University of Chicago Press,University of Chicago Press,University of Chicago, acting through its Press
Subject
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