Gil Michael A, Emberts Zachary, Jones Harrison, St Mary Colette M
Am Nat. 2017 Mar;189(3):227-241. doi: 10.1086/690055. Epub 2016 Dec 29.
Empirical studies in select systems suggest that social information-the incidental or deliberate information produced by animals and available to other animals-can fundamentally shape animal grouping behavior. However, to understand the role of social information in animal behavior and fitness, we must establish general theory that quantifies effects of social information across ecological contexts and generates expectations that can be applied across systems. Here we used dynamic state variable modeling to isolate effects of social information about food and predators on grouping behavior and fitness. We characterized optimal behavior from a set of strategies that included grouping with different numbers of conspecifics or heterospecifics and the option to forage or be vigilant over the course of a day. We show that the use of social information alone increases grouping behavior but constrains group size to limit competition, ultimately increasing individual fitness substantially across various ecological contexts. We also found that across various contexts, foraging in mixed-species groups is generally better than foraging in conspecific groups, supporting recent theory on competition-information quality trade-offs. Our findings suggest that multiple forms of social information shape animal grouping and fitness, which are sensitive to resource availability and predation pressure that determine information usefulness.
对特定系统的实证研究表明,社会信息——动物产生并可供其他动物获取的偶然或有意的信息——能够从根本上塑造动物的群体行为。然而,要理解社会信息在动物行为和适应性中的作用,我们必须建立通用理论,该理论要量化社会信息在不同生态环境中的影响,并产生可应用于多个系统的预期。在此,我们使用动态状态变量模型来分离关于食物和捕食者的社会信息对群体行为和适应性的影响。我们从一组策略中确定了最优行为,这些策略包括与不同数量的同种或异种个体组成群体,以及在一天中选择觅食或保持警惕。我们表明,仅使用社会信息会增加群体行为,但会限制群体规模以减少竞争,最终在各种生态环境中大幅提高个体适应性。我们还发现,在各种环境中,在混合物种群体中觅食通常比在同种群体中觅食更好,这支持了最近关于竞争与信息质量权衡的理论。我们的研究结果表明,多种形式的社会信息塑造了动物的群体行为和适应性,而这些行为和适应性对决定信息有用性的资源可用性和捕食压力很敏感。