Lihoreau Mathieu, Charleston Michael A, Senior Alistair M, Clissold Fiona J, Raubenheimer David, Simpson Stephen J, Buhl Jerome
Research Center on Animal Cognition (CRCA), Center for Integrative Biology (CBI), University Paul Sabatier, CNRS, UPS, 118 route de Narbonne, Toulouse 31200, France
School of Physical Sciences, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania 7005, Australia.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2017 Aug 19;372(1727). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2016.0238.
Nutrition impinges on virtually all aspects of an animal's life, including social interactions. Recent advances in nutritional ecology show how social animals often trade-off individual nutrition and group cohesion when foraging in simplified experimental environments. Here, we explore how the spatial structure of the nutritional landscape influences these complex collective foraging dynamics in ecologically realistic environments. We introduce an individual-based model integrating key concepts of nutritional geometry, collective animal behaviour and spatial ecology to study the nutritional behaviour of animal groups in large heterogeneous environments containing foods with different abundance, patchiness and nutritional composition. Simulations show that the spatial distribution of foods constrains the ability of individuals to balance their nutrient intake, the lowest performance being attained in environments with small isolated patches of nutritionally complementary foods. Social interactions improve individual regulatory performances when food is scarce and clumpy, but not when it is abundant and scattered, suggesting that collective foraging is favoured in some environments only. These social effects are further amplified if foragers adopt flexible search strategies based on their individual nutritional state. Our model provides a conceptual and predictive framework for developing new empirically testable hypotheses in the emerging field of social nutrition.This article is part of the themed issue 'Physiological determinants of social behaviour in animals'.
营养几乎影响着动物生活的方方面面,包括社会互动。营养生态学的最新进展表明,群居动物在简化的实验环境中觅食时,往往会在个体营养和群体凝聚力之间进行权衡。在此,我们探讨营养景观的空间结构如何在生态现实环境中影响这些复杂的集体觅食动态。我们引入了一个基于个体的模型,该模型整合了营养几何学、动物集体行为和空间生态学的关键概念,以研究动物群体在包含具有不同丰度、斑块性和营养成分的食物的大型异质环境中的营养行为。模拟结果表明,食物的空间分布限制了个体平衡营养摄入的能力,在营养互补食物的孤立小斑块环境中,个体的表现最差。当食物稀缺且成块时,社会互动会提高个体的调节能力,但当食物丰富且分散时则不然,这表明集体觅食仅在某些环境中更具优势。如果觅食者根据自身营养状况采用灵活的搜索策略,这些社会效应会进一步放大。我们的模型为在新兴的社会营养领域提出新的可实证检验的假设提供了一个概念性和预测性框架。本文是主题为“动物社会行为的生理决定因素”特刊的一部分。