Abstract

Collective foraging, based on positive feedback and quorum responses, is believed to improve the foraging efficiency of animals. Nutritional models suggest that social information transfer increases the ability of foragers with closely aligned nutritional needs to find nutrients and maintain a balanced diet. However, whether or not collective foraging is adaptive in a heterogeneous group composed of individuals with differing nutritional needs is virtually unexplored. Here we develop an evolutionary agent-based model using concepts of nutritional ecology to address this knowledge gap. Our aim was to evaluate how collective foraging, mediated by social retention on foods, can improve nutrient balancing in individuals with different requirements. The model suggests that in groups where inter-individual nutritional needs are unimodally distributed, high levels of collective foraging yield optimal individual fitness by reducing search times that result from moving between nutritionally imbalanced foods. However, where nutritional needs are highly bimodal (e.g. where the requirements of males and females differ) collective foraging is selected against, leading to group fission. In this case, additional mechanisms such as assortative interactions can coevolve to allow collective foraging by subgroups of individuals with aligned requirements. Our findings indicate that collective foraging is an efficient strategy for nutrient regulation in animals inhabiting complex nutritional environments and exhibiting a range of social forms.

Highlights

  • Many species live in heterogeneous environments in which essential resources are patchily distributed

  • For each parameter set we performed 30 model runs and report here the mean and 0.025–0.975 quantile of the results. We explored those effects in differing nutritional environments, and under differing assumptions about time-costs associated with finding foods (T)

  • We examined the efficiency of collective foraging in groups of individuals with the same intake target (IT)

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Summary

Introduction

Many species live in heterogeneous environments in which essential resources are patchily distributed. In gregarious animals, such as many insects, fish, birds and ungulates, social information transfer may result in collective foraging decisions whereby all (or most) individuals in the group decide to exploit the same food resource from several available alternatives [3,4,5] These collective dynamics are driven by positive feedback and quorum responses, whereby the probability of an individual choosing a resource varies positively and nonlinearly with the number of individuals already exploiting that resource [4,6]. Little is known about the evolutionary roots of this widespread phenomenon [7]

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