Biodiversity Division, National Institute for Agro-Environmental Sciences, 3-1-3, Kannondai, Tsukuba-shi, Ibarak 305-8604, Japan.
Ecology. 2009 Dec;90(12):3536-45. doi: 10.1890/08-1910.1.
Animal movements in heterogeneous environments play a crucial role in a variety of ecological processes. Although a hierarchical structure to the scale of movements has been observed in many animal species, few studies to date have revealed what causes such multi-spatial scale movements within the framework of optimal theories. Using detailed information on movement paths and prey captures by Intermediate Egrets in rice fields, this study explored the effects of individual experience at multi-temporal scales on subsequent movement parameters. The results supported three predictions based on optimal foraging theories: (1) movement distances at small and large spatial scales are determined by past foraging experiences over short (one minute) and long (seven to eight minutes) temporal scales, respectively; (2) responses to prey encounters vary between temporal scales, e.g., prey attacks in the previous one minute caused egrets to walk away (i.e., area-avoided search), whereas those in the preceding eight minutes caused egrets to stay around (i.e., area-restricted search); and (3) the probability of patch departure by flying increases with decreasing intake rates in the previous seven minutes, and the quitting intake rate is mostly lower than the long-term average, not including travel time. These results suggest that egrets make different adaptive decisions at different spatial scales: in response to a clumped prey distribution at a large spatial scale, and to a dispersed distribution or behavioral depression of prey at a small spatial scale. This study showed that the framework of optimal foraging theories is useful for comprehensively explaining the different movement modes in animals. It should also be emphasized that considering both area-avoided and restricted searches at multi-temporal scales is important for understanding movement decisions, particularly in organisms searching for hierarchically distributed resources.
动物在异质环境中的运动在各种生态过程中起着至关重要的作用。尽管在许多动物物种中观察到运动尺度具有层次结构,但迄今为止,很少有研究在最优理论框架内揭示导致这种多空间尺度运动的原因。本研究利用白鹭在稻田中的运动轨迹和猎物捕获的详细信息,探讨了个体在多时间尺度上的经验对后续运动参数的影响。结果支持了基于最优觅食理论的三个预测:(1)小尺度和大尺度的运动距离分别由短时间(一分钟)和长时间(七到八分钟)尺度上的过去觅食经验决定;(2)对猎物遭遇的反应在时间尺度上有所不同,例如,前一分钟的猎物攻击导致白鹭离开(即区域回避搜索),而前八分钟的猎物攻击导致白鹭留在周围(即区域限制搜索);(3)在过去的七分钟内,由于摄入量的减少,白鹭飞离斑块的概率增加,而停止摄入的速率大多低于长期平均水平,不包括旅行时间。这些结果表明,白鹭在不同的空间尺度上做出不同的适应性决策:对大空间尺度上的聚集猎物分布做出反应,对小空间尺度上的分散分布或猎物行为抑制做出反应。本研究表明,最优觅食理论框架可用于全面解释动物的不同运动模式。还应强调的是,在多时间尺度上考虑区域回避和限制搜索对于理解运动决策很重要,特别是在搜索层次化分布资源的生物体中。