4: Optimal foraging Flashcards

1
Q

why can we make precise predictions on behaviour?

A

behavioural ecology has strong theory

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2
Q

what is the optimality logic?

A

selection will favour animals that forage most effectively

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3
Q

what is optimality modeling used for? (3)

A
  • used to determine the best course of action for an animal
  • insights into optimal foraging (often graphically)
  • predict how and animal should optimise its own food intake or food provisioning to young per unit time
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4
Q

what ideas did John Maynard Smith introduce?

A

ideas from economic theory and applied these models to animal behaviour
- developed optimality modelling

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5
Q

in a Zach study 1979 what was the study and what were the observations ? (3)

A

whelk choice by North western crows in USA

  • always select large whelks (3.5-4.4cm)
  • drop them from 5m onto rocks to break them open and eat body inside the shell
  • keep dropping the same whelk until it breaks
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6
Q

in a Zach study 1979 what were the predictions? (3)

A
  • large whelks should break easier at 5m than small whelks
  • whelks dropped at <5m should be less likely to break but if >5m no more likely to break
  • chances of whelk breaking should be independent of number of times its dropped - each time its dropped it has the same chance of breaking
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7
Q

in a Zach study 1979 after dropping whelks from a tower on the beach from different heights what were the results found? (6)

A
  • large whelks take fewer drops to crack (5 compared to 18 for small)
  • larger whelks have more calories
  • 5m is the optimal height with 5.6 being the min energy expenditure
  • if drop from too high then whelk may be stolen before reaching it
  • chance of whelk breaking not affected by number of previous drops
  • optimal behaviour by dropping from 5m and using the same whelk until it breaks
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8
Q

what can a hypothesis based on cost benefit logic that is incorrect lead to?

A

further insights

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9
Q

why may a hypothesis based on cost benefit logic be incorrect? (4)

A
  • animal may not have been well designed by selection (not yet evolved to changing environment)
  • observations may have been inappropriate so need to re-assess experimental design
  • important factor may have been omitted from the model
  • assumptions may not have been valid for the species studying
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10
Q

describe the predictions of the oystercatcher study on constraints on foraging

A

predicted to select large mussels that yield the most food

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11
Q

what were the results of the oystercatcher study on constraints on foraging

A
  • birds selected mussels smaller than predicted as cant open the largest ones
  • if only mussels that can be opened are considered then the optimum size is 50mm which matches observations
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12
Q

what do moose need to eat and why must they carefully select what they eat?

A

energy rich low sodium deciduous forest leaves or sodium rich low energy aquatic vegetation surrounding lakes
- plants may be deficient in nutrients

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13
Q

in the moose what can set a limit on the total food it can process daily?

A

stomach space- rumen constraint

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14
Q

In Belovsky 1978 optimal foraging approach on moose what was found? (5)

A
  • energy gained from either lots of aquatic vegetation or a little terrestrial
  • cant just exist on aquatic plants
  • only a small area satisfies all constraints
  • constraints include energy, sodium and rumen
  • diet lies trying to maximise energy intake
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15
Q

what is the general economic model also known as?

- what does it predict?

A

Charnovs marginal value theorem

- how animals should forage in a patchy environment

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16
Q

what do foraging environments tend to be?

A

patchy with food disturbed in clumps

17
Q

what are 2 examples of a patchy foraging environment?

A
  • hummingbirds move from bush to bush to collect food

- swarm of krill is a patch for humpback whales

18
Q

what is the loading curve in MVT?

A
  • diminishing returns of continuing to feed in a patch

- rate of food intake decreases over time as the patch may become depleted or the animal overloaded with food

19
Q

what is the optimal patch time in MVT and how does it vary?

A
  • if didn’t take long to reach the patch there will be a steeper tangent to the curve
  • longer travel time means animal should spend longer in the patch to maximise energy intake
20
Q

what happens if an animal leaves a patch before or after its optimal time?

A

the rate of energy intake is lower

21
Q

if you plot travel time against time spent in a patch what is the curve?

A

curve of diminishing return

22
Q

what are the 4 main assumptions of the MVT?

A
  • travel time between patches is known (unless searching fo next flower in a sparse patch)
  • travel costs = patch costs (true for hovering hummingbird but not seed eater )
  • patch profitability is known
  • no predation
23
Q

what did Kacelnik discover in 1984 about what starlings get as they forage and why?

A

diminishing returns
as harder to find food when carrying prey
- more it carries the less efficient it is at probing for more

24
Q

what did Kacelnik discover in 1984 about what starlings feed on and how does their optimum prey number to collect differ between taking a long or shorter travel time?

A

leatherjackets- daddy longlegs larvae

  • longer = 7 prey
  • shorter = 4/5
25
Q

what was Kacelnik 1984 set up for starlings?

A

trained to feed from mealworms from artificial patches with diminishing returns placed at 8-600m from nest
- dropped mealworms successively slower to create diminishing returns

26
Q

what did Kacelnik discover in 1984 for how the starling load size changed in the experiment?

A

increased with increasing distance from the nest

27
Q

Cowie 1977 tested the MVT assumptions using great tits- what was done/found? (5)

A
  • expend more energy during travel time 30 patches with 5 experimental trees
  • different spacing of trees varied travel time between patches
  • travel and foraging times closer than predicted by the model
  • differences in travel/patch costs influence foraging behaviour
28
Q

what was the Lima 1984 study on Downy woodpeckers to test MVT assumptions? (8)

A
  • trained them to forage for seeds from logs each with 24 holes
  • logs were either empty or with seeds
  • birds sample different patches to work out profitability
  • 0 or 24 seeds 1.7 looks
  • 0 or 6 seeds 6.3 looks
  • 0 or 12 seeds 3.5 looks
  • observed means close to predicted
  • used information during foraging to maximise energy intake and minimise search costs
29
Q

what do optimality models used to study behaviour provide?

A

testable quantitative predictions

- so can test theories of an animal’s behaviour

30
Q

what do optimality models and behaviour involve?

A

explicit assumptions - can alter model to learn more about subtle behavioural differences

31
Q

what do optimality models and behaviour illustrate?

A

the generality of decision making - can be applied to different species and not just based on foraging behaviour (e.g. how many eggs should be laid)

32
Q

what are the 3 responses when a model fails to predict observations?

A
  • ignore it and count as error
  • accept animal is sub optimal
  • rebuild model
33
Q

how is the rate at which an animal gains energy quantified?

A

dividing caloric value by time taken to find food

34
Q

how may leafcutter ants appear to be acting non-optimally?

A

reduced daytime foraging by larger ants due to attacks from parasitic flies