INVESTIGADORES
MORALES juan manuel
artículos
Título:
The influence of distance, habitat, and memory on animal movement patterns
Autor/es:
DALZIEL, B; MORALES, J. M.; FRYXELL, J. M.
Revista:
American Naturalist
Editorial:
American Society of Naturalists
Referencias:
Año: 2008 vol. 172 p. 248 - 258
ISSN:
0003-0147
Resumen:
Animal movement paths are often thought of as a confluence of behavioral processes and landscape patterns. Yet it has proven difficult to develop frameworks for analyzing animal movement that can test these interactions. Here we describe a novel method for fitting movement models to data that can incorporate diverse aspects of landscapes and behavior. Using data from five elk (Cervus canadensis) reintroduced to central Ontario, we employed artificial neural networks to estimate movement probability kernels as functions of three landscape-behavioral processes. These consisted of measures of the animals’ response to the physical spatial structureof the landscape, the spatial variability in resources, and memory of previously visited locations. The results support the view that animal movement results from interactions among elements of landscape structure and behavior, motivating context-dependent movement probabilities, rather than from successive realizations of static distributions, as some traditional models of movement and resource selection assume. Flexible, nonlinear models may thus prove useful in understanding the mechanisms controlling animal movement patterns.