Optimal patch use by a territorial forager
โ Scribed by Hugh P. Possingham; Alasdair I. Houston
- Book ID
- 104154739
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 542 KB
- Volume
- 145
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5193
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
The marginal value theorem (MVT) describes when a forager should leave a patch if it is to maximize its long-term rate of energetic gain. The theorem states that the forager should leave a patch when its instantaneous rate of energy gain in that patch falls to the overall rate for the environment. One of the assumptions on which this result rests is that there is little or no revisitation of patches. In this paper we explore the consequences of maximizing long-term rate of energetic gain in an environment in which patches are revisited. We have in mind a territorial species that systematically exploits patches in which food renews. We compare the predictions of our model with those of the MVT and discuss their implications for laboratory and field experiments of patch use theory. The coupling of resource dyanmics to a behavioural model is an important feature of our approach.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
House flies, Musca domestica, respond to visual contrasts on the substrate if a resource is associated with the contrasting patterns. Visible resource patch boundaries serve as a signal to flies that they are about to leave a rewarding patch. Searching flies respond to such visual information by wal
The predatory larvae of the caddis Plectrocnemia conspersa (Curtis) cause significant prey depletion in a habitat in which prey are patchily distributed. Optimal foraging theory predicts that under these circumstances a predator should stay in any given patch until the prey capture rate there drops