Modelling the mobility of living organisms in heterogeneous landscapes: does memory improve foraging success?

Author:

Boyer Denis12,Walsh Peter D.3

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire de Physique Théorique, IRSAMC, CNRS UMR 5152, Université de Toulouse, UPS, 31062 Toulouse, France

2. Instituto de Física, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, DF 04510, Mexico

3. VaccinApe, 5301 Westbard Circle, Bethesda, MD 20816, USA

Abstract

Thanks to recent technological advances, it is now possible to track with an unprecedented precision and for long periods of time the movement patterns of many living organisms in their habitat. The increasing amount of data available on single trajectories offers the possibility of understanding how animals move and of testing basic movement models. Random walks have long represented the main description for micro-organisms and have also been useful to understand the foraging behaviour of large animals. Nevertheless, most vertebrates, in particular humans and other primates, rely on sophisticated cognitive tools such as spatial maps, episodic memory and travel cost discounting. These properties call for other modelling approaches of mobility patterns. We propose a foraging framework where a learning mobile agent uses a combination of memory-based and random steps. We investigate how advantageous it is to use memory for exploiting resources in heterogeneous and changing environments. An adequate balance of determinism and random exploration is found to maximize the foraging efficiency and to generate trajectories with an intricate spatio-temporal order, where travel routes emerge without multi-step planning. Based on this approach, we propose some tools for analysing the non-random nature of mobility patterns in general.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Engineering,General Mathematics

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