Interactions between landscape structure and animal behavior: the roles ofheterogeneously distributed resources and food deprivation on movement patterns
Ne. Mcintyre et Ja. Wiens, Interactions between landscape structure and animal behavior: the roles ofheterogeneously distributed resources and food deprivation on movement patterns, LANDSC ECOL, 14(5), 1999, pp. 437-447
To examine how resource distributions affect the movement behaviors of fed
and food-deprived Eleodes extricata Say darkling beetles (Coleoptera: Teneb
rionidae), we experimentally manipulated the dispersion of food to create c
lumped, random, and uniform distributions in an otherwise homogeneous 25-m(
2) experimental field landscape. Quantitative measures of the tortuosity, n
et linear displacement, overall path length, and velocity of beetle movemen
t pathways showed that food-deprived beetles generally moved more slowly an
d over shorter distances than did fed beetles. This effect was mediated by
the spatial distribution of food, however; food distributed randomly over t
he landscape evoked more tortuous paths over larger overall distances. The
foraging movements of food-deprived beetles were most different from those
of fed individuals in treatments with randomly distributed food resources.
These results show that the influence of spatial structure on individuals d
epends not only on the arrangement of pattern but also on the function that
the structure plays. Thus, 'spatial structure' is defined not only by phys
ical characteristics of the landscape but also by how that structure is use
d by animals.