School of Natural Sciences and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
Department of Biosciences, Swansea University, Swansea, UK.
Ecol Lett. 2021 May;24(5):920-934. doi: 10.1111/ele.13705. Epub 2021 Mar 9.
Animals alter their habitat use in response to the energetic demands of movement ('energy landscapes') and the risk of predation ('the landscape of fear'). Recent research suggests that animals also select habitats and move in ways that minimise their chance of temporarily losing control of movement and thereby suffering slips, falls, collisions or other accidents, particularly when the consequences are likely to be severe (resulting in injury or death). We propose that animals respond to the costs of an 'accident landscape' in conjunction with predation risk and energetic costs when deciding when, where, and how to move in their daily lives. We develop a novel theoretical framework describing how features of physical landscapes interact with animal size, morphology, and behaviour to affect the risk and severity of accidents, and predict how accident risk might interact with predation risk and energetic costs to dictate movement decisions across the physical landscape. Future research should focus on testing the hypotheses presented here for different real-world systems to gain insight into the relative importance of theorised effects in the field.
动物会根据运动的能量需求(“能量景观”)和被捕食的风险(“恐惧景观”)来改变它们的栖息地利用方式。最近的研究表明,动物还会选择栖息地,并以最小化暂时失去运动控制的机会的方式移动,从而避免滑倒、跌倒、碰撞或其他事故,特别是当后果可能很严重时(导致受伤或死亡)。我们提出,动物在决定何时、何地以及如何在日常生活中移动时,会结合捕食风险和能量成本,对“事故景观”的成本做出反应。我们开发了一个新的理论框架,描述了物理景观的特征如何与动物的大小、形态和行为相互作用,从而影响事故的风险和严重程度,并预测事故风险如何与捕食风险和能量成本相互作用,从而决定在物理景观中的运动决策。未来的研究应该集中在测试不同现实系统中提出的假设,以深入了解该领域中理论化效应的相对重要性。