Koops Marten A, Abrahams Mark V
Department of Zoology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3T 2N2, Canada.
Am Nat. 2003 Apr;161(4):586-600. doi: 10.1086/368297. Epub 2003 Mar 28.
Understanding and predicting the spatial distribution of social foragers among patchily distributed resources is a problem that has been addressed with numerous approaches over the 30 yr since the ideal free distribution (IFD) was first introduced. The two main approaches involve perceptual constraints and unequal competitors. Here we present a model of social foragers choosing among resource patches. Each forager makes a probabilistic choice on the basis of the information acquired through past foraging experiences. Food acquisition is determined by the forager's competitive ability. This model predicts that perceptual constraints have a greater influence on the spatial distribution of foragers than unequal competitive abilities but that competitive ability plays an important role in determining an individual's information state and behavior. Better competitors have access to more information; consequently, we find that competitive abilities and perceptual constraints are integrated through the social environment occupied by individual foragers. Relative competitive abilities influence the forager's information state, and the ability to use information determines the resulting spatial distribution.
自首次引入理想自由分布(IFD)以来的30年里,理解和预测在资源分布零散的情况下社会觅食者的空间分布一直是一个问题,人们已用多种方法来解决这一问题。两种主要方法涉及感知限制和不平等的竞争者。在此,我们提出一个社会觅食者在资源斑块间进行选择的模型。每个觅食者基于通过过去觅食经历获取的信息做出概率性选择。食物获取由觅食者的竞争能力决定。该模型预测,感知限制对觅食者空间分布的影响比不平等的竞争能力更大,但竞争能力在决定个体的信息状态和行为方面发挥着重要作用。竞争力更强的个体能获取更多信息;因此,我们发现竞争能力和感知限制是通过个体觅食者所处的社会环境整合在一起的。相对竞争能力影响觅食者的信息状态,而利用信息的能力决定最终的空间分布。