Abstract
Animal behaviour is increasingly seen as an important component in maintaining functional connectivity between patches in fragmented landscapes. However, models that explicitly incorporate behavioural trade-offs are rarely applied to landscape planning problems like connectivity. The aim of this study was to explore how state-dependent behaviour influenced functional connectivity between patches from a theoretical perspective. We investigated how inter-patch distances influenced functional connectivity using a dynamic state variable model framework. The decision making process of an individual ruminant facing fitness trade-offs in staying in its patch of origin or moving to another patch at various distances were explicitly modelled. We incorporated energetic costs and predation costs of feeding, ruminating, and resting while in the patch and for transit between patches based on inter-patch distance. Functional connectivity was maintained with isolated patches when they offered high intake and the inactivity of rumination associated with rapid gut fill resulted in reduced predation risk. Nevertheless, individuals in high energetic state often would forgo moving to another patch, whereas individuals in poor energetic states were forced to accept the cost of movement to best meet their requirements in the distant patch. The inclusion of state-dependent behavioural models provides important insights into functional connectivity in fragmented landscapes and helps integrate animal behaviour into landscape planning. We discuss the consequences of our findings for landscape planning to show how the approach provides a heuristic tool to assess alternative scenarios for restoring landscape functional connectivity.
Highlights
Animal behaviour is regarded as an increasingly important process in conservation ecology, the interaction between movement behaviour and landscape pattern [1,2,3,4,5]
Individuals modelled with a linear fitness function maintained, on average, and across all scenarios, functional connectivity over greater inter-patch distances than individuals modelled with a sigmoid fitness function
At a distance of 2 distance units (DU) between patches, individuals modelled with a linear fitness function had a lower average rate of survival (86%) than individuals modelled with sigmoid fitness functions (96%)
Summary
Animal behaviour is regarded as an increasingly important process in conservation ecology, the interaction between movement behaviour and landscape pattern [1,2,3,4,5]. Quantification of the structural connection of patches is no longer considered adequate for assessing the connectivity among patches.
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