Scale-free foraging by primates emerges from their interaction with a complex environment

Author:

Boyer Denis1,Ramos-Fernández Gabriel2,Miramontes Octavio1,Mateos José L1,Cocho Germinal1,Larralde Hernán3,Ramos Humberto1,Rojas Fernando4

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Sistemas Complejos, Instituto de Física, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de MéxicoApartado Postal 20-364, 01000 México DF, México

2. Centro Interdisciplinario de Investigación para el Desarrollo Integral Regional, Unidad Oaxaca, Instituto Politécnico NacionalCalle Hornos 1003, Santa Cruz Xoxocotlán, 71230 Oaxaca, México

3. Centro de Ciencias Físicas, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de MéxicoCuernavaca, 62210 Morelos, México

4. Facultad de Ciencias Físico Matemáticas, Universidad Autónoma de PueblaAv. San Claudio y Río Verde, Col. San Manuel, 72570 Puebla, México

Abstract

Scale-free foraging patterns are widespread among animals. These may be the outcome of an optimal searching strategy to find scarce, randomly distributed resources, but a less explored alternative is that this behaviour may result from the interaction of foraging animals with a particular distribution of resources. We introduce a simple foraging model where individual primates follow mental maps and choose their displacements according to a maximum efficiency criterion, in a spatially disordered environment containing many trees with a heterogeneous size distribution. We show that a particular tree-size frequency distribution induces non-Gaussian movement patterns with multiple spatial scales (Lévy walks). These results are consistent with field observations of tree-size variation and spider monkey ( Ateles geoffroyi ) foraging patterns. We discuss the consequences that our results may have for the patterns of seed dispersal by foraging primates.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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