Spatial segregation among colonies without knowing the whereabouts of
your neighbours
- Geert Aarts,
- Evert Mul,
- John Fieberg,
- Sophie Brasseur,
- Jan van Gils,
- Jason Matthiopoulos,
- Louise Riotte-Lambert
Geert Aarts
Wageningen University and Research
Corresponding Author:geert.aarts@wur.nl
Author ProfileJan van Gils
Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research
Author ProfileJason Matthiopoulos
University of Glasgow School of Life Sciences
Author ProfileLouise Riotte-Lambert
University of Glasgow School of Life Sciences
Author ProfileAbstract
Resource competition among central-place foragers often leads to space
partitioning, even if individuals do not show signs of direct agonistic
interactions. Using simple individual-based simulations, we show that
individual-level spatial awareness and memory of resource availability
are sufficient to cause spatial segregation in the foraging ranges of
colonial animals. The shapes of the foraging distributions are governed
by commuting costs, the emerging distribution of depleted resources, and
the fidelity of foragers to their colonies. A spatial imbalance between
resource requirement and resource availability in one region can
propagate through the landscape and lead to non-trivial space-use
patterns elsewhere. Interestingly, while better spatial memory increases
segregation between neighbouring colonies, it can lower the average
intake rate of the population, suggesting a potential trade-off between
an individual strive for optimality and population growth rates.