Bristol Centre for Complexity Sciences, Department of Engineering Mathematics and School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, BS8 1UB UK.
Consortium of the Americas for Interdisciplinary Science and Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, 87131 New Mexico USA.
Mov Ecol. 2014 Sep 3;2(1):20. doi: 10.1186/s40462-014-0020-7. eCollection 2014.
Animal spacing has important implications for population abundance, species demography and the environment. Mechanisms underlying spatial segregation have their roots in the characteristics of the animals, their mutual interaction and their response, collective as well as individual, to environmental variables. This review describes how the combination of these factors shapes the patterns we observe and presents a practical, usable framework for the analysis of movement data in confined spaces. The basis of the framework is the theory of interacting random walks and the mathematical description of out-of-equilibrium systems. Although our focus is on modelling and interpreting animal home ranges and territories in vertebrates, we believe further studies on invertebrates may also help to answer questions and resolve unanswered puzzles that are still inaccessible to experimental investigation in vertebrate species.
动物的空间分布对种群数量、物种动态和环境都有重要影响。空间隔离的机制源于动物的特征、它们的相互作用以及它们对环境变量的集体和个体反应。本综述描述了这些因素的结合如何塑造我们观察到的模式,并提出了一个实用的、可用的框架,用于分析封闭空间中的运动数据。该框架的基础是相互作用的随机行走理论和非平衡系统的数学描述。虽然我们的重点是在脊椎动物中建模和解释动物的活动范围和领地,但我们相信对无脊椎动物的进一步研究也可能有助于回答问题,并解决在脊椎动物物种中仍然无法通过实验研究解决的未解决难题。