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Evidence for encounter-conditional, area-restricted search in a preliminary study of Colombian blowgun hunters
- Source :
- Ross, CT; & Winterhalder, B. (2018). Evidence for encounter-conditional, area-restricted search in a preliminary study of Colombian blowgun hunters. PLOS ONE, 13(12), e0207633-e0207633. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0207633. UC Davis: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/620088w4, PLoS ONE, PloS one, vol 13, iss 12, PLoS ONE, Vol 13, Iss 12, p e0207633 (2018), PLoS One
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- eScholarship, University of California, 2018.
-
Abstract
- Active search for prey is energetically costly, so understanding how foragers optimize search has been central to foraging theory. Some theoretical work has suggested that foragers of randomly distributed prey should search using Lévy flights, while work on area-restricted and intermittent search strategies has demonstrated that foragers can use the information provided by prey encounters to more effectively adapt search direction and velocity. Previous empirical comparisons of these search modes have tended to rely on distribution-level analyses, due to the difficulty of collecting event-level data on encounters linked to the GPS tracks of foragers. Here we use a preliminary event-level data-set (18.7 hours of encounter-annotated focal follows over 6 trips) to show that two Colombian blowgun hunters use adaptive encounter-conditional heuristics, not non-conditional Lévy flights, when searching for prey. Using a theoretically derived Bayesian model, we estimate changes in turning-angle and search velocity as a function of encounters with prey at lagged time-steps, and find that: 1) hunters increase average turning-angle in response to encounters, producing a more tortuous search of patches of higher prey density, but adopt more efficient uni-directional, inter-patch movement after failing to encounter prey over a sufficient period of time; and, 2) hunters reduce search velocity in response to encounters, causing them to spend more of their search time in patches with demonstrably higher prey density. These results illustrate the importance of using event-level data to contrast encounter-conditional, area-restricted search and Lévy flights in explaining the search behavior of humans and other organisms.
- Subjects :
- Male
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine
Distribution Curves
Search tactics
Physiology
Computer science
Population Dynamics
Predation
Social Sciences
01 natural sciences
Predator-Prey Dynamics
Blowgun hunters
Ornithology
Models
Bird Flight
Medicine and Health Sciences
Econometrics
Psychology
Foraging
Animal Flight
Appetitive Behavior
Marine Ecosystems
Multidisciplinary
Ecology
Animal Behavior
Geography
Contrast (statistics)
Area-restricted search
Trophic Interactions
Community Ecology
Physical Sciences
Medicine
Bird flight
Research Article
Statistical Distributions
General Science & Technology
Science
Movement
Optimal foraging theory
Behavioral ecology
Colombia
Human Geography
Bayesian inference
Models, Biological
010603 evolutionary biology
Ecosystems
03 medical and health sciences
Cultural
Animals
Humans
Anthropology, Cultural
Ecosystem
Behavior
Population Biology
Biological Locomotion
Ecology and Environmental Sciences
Biology and Life Sciences
Bayes Theorem
Feeding Behavior
Biological
Probability Theory
030104 developmental biology
Anthropology
Predatory Behavior
Hunter-gatherers
Earth Sciences
Human Mobility
Heuristics
Zoology
Human behavioral ecology
Mathematics
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Ross, CT; & Winterhalder, B. (2018). Evidence for encounter-conditional, area-restricted search in a preliminary study of Colombian blowgun hunters. PLOS ONE, 13(12), e0207633-e0207633. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0207633. UC Davis: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/620088w4, PLoS ONE, PloS one, vol 13, iss 12, PLoS ONE, Vol 13, Iss 12, p e0207633 (2018), PLoS One
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....a079fb18472aa9a375eeaaa1e3ba20e5