Spencer, Wayne D,(2012), Home ranges and the value of spatial information. , Journal of Mammalogy, American Society of Mammalogists
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Abstract
Animals concentrate their activities within areas we call home ranges because information about places increases
fitness. Most animals, and certainly all mammals, store information about places in cognitive maps—or neurally
encoded representations of the geometric relations among places—and learn to associate objects or events with
places on their map. I define the value of information as a time-dependent increment it adds to any appropriate
currency of fitness for an informed versus an uninformed forager, and integrate it into simple conceptual models
that help explain movements of animals that learn, forget, and use information. Unlike other space-use models,
these recognize that movement decisions are based on an individual’s imperfect and ever-changing expectancies
about the environment—rather than omniscience or ignorance. Using simple, deterministic models, I
demonstrate how the use of such dynamic information explains why animals use home ranges, and can help
explain diverse movement patterns, including systematic patrolling or ‘‘traplining,’’ shifting activity or focal
areas, extra-home-range exploration, and seemingly random (although goal-directed and spatially contagious)
movements. These models also provide insights about interindividual spacing patterns, from exclusive home
ranges (whether defended as territories or not) to broadly overlapping or shared ranges. Incorporating this
dynamic view of animal expectancies and information value into more-complex and realistic movement models,
such as random-walk, Bayesian foraging, and multi-individual movement models, should facilitate a more
comprehensive and empirical understanding of animal space-use phenomena. The fitness value of cognitive
maps and the selective exploitation of spatial information support a general theory of animal space use, which
explains why mammals have home ranges and how they use them.
Keywords : | cognitive map, foraging, hippocampus, home range, information, learning, movements, space use, spacing, territory, UNSPECIFIED |
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Journal or Publication Title: | Journal of Mammalogy |
Volume: | 93 |
Number: | 4 |
Item Type: | Article |
Subjects: | Manajemen |
Depositing User: | Arief Eryka Zendy |
Date Deposited: | 26 Dec 2019 06:35 |
Last Modified: | 26 Dec 2019 06:35 |
URI: | https://repofeb.undip.ac.id/id/eprint/857 |