Movement Ecology 2013, 1:13 doi:10.1186/2051-3933-1-13
Using Diel Movement Behavior To Infer Foraging Strategies Related To Ecological And Social Factors In Elephants. (2013)
Adaptive movement behaviors allow individuals to respond to fluctuations in resource quality and distribution in order to maintain fitness.
Movement Ecology
Polansky, L., Douglas-Hamilton I., Wittemyer G.
Summary
Abstract Adaptive movement behaviors allow individuals to respond to fluctuations in resource quality and distribution in order to maintain fitness. Classically, studies of the interaction between ecological conditions and movement behavior have focused on such metrics as travel distance, velocity, home range size or patch occupancy time as the salient metrics of behavior. Driven by the emergence of very regular high frequency data, more recently the importance of interpreting the autocorrelation structure of movement as a behavioral metric has become apparent. Studying movement of a free ranging African savannah elephant population, we evaluated how two movement metrics, diel displacement (DD) and movement predictability (MP - the degree of autocorrelated movement activity at diel time scales), changed in response to variation in resource availability as measured by the Normalized Difference Vegetation Index. We were able to capitalize on long term (multi-year) yet high resolution (hourly) global positioning system tracking datasets, the sample size of which allows robust analysis of complex models. We use optimal foraging theory predictions as a framework to interpret our results, in particular contrasting the behaviors across changes in social rank and resource availability to infer which movement behaviors at diel time scales may be optimal in this highly social species. http://www.movementecologyjournal.com/content/1/1/13